If the clients have investments abroad or family members in several jurisdictions, you will be glad you had read this book before they came to see you. It is not about statutes, directives and treaties; it is about what can be done - despite them or with their help. Long gone are the days when it was enough to tell clients what they could not do. They want to know what to do next. As a tax barrister practising in London, and as chairman of the International Tax Planning Association, Milton Grundy has for any years been considering and discussing (and sometimes solving) problems in international tax planning, and he distils his experience, wittily and succinctly, into the pages of this charming work.'