This was a good and readable book, but it didn't give me what I was hoping when I bought it.
'Barbarians: Secrets of the Dark Ages' is so racy and commercial a title, I perhaps shouldn't have been surprised when the content failed to live up to the promise. I was happy to read informative stuff across the span of history from the year dot -- or about the year 0 AD, at any rate -- through to the end of Paganism in Europe, as represented by the Christianisation of the Norse. It was all interesting enough. There was quite a concentration on the British Isles, where one would hardly use the term 'barbarian' after the Roman Invasion. And if you're interested in the Anglo-Saxons, this would make a good if not comprehensive introduction.
I mustn't be too harsh if I knew most of what Rudgely's researches uncovered, and therefore didn't consider them Secrets. But as I was looking for more, this wasn't the book to supply it. It covered the evidence, historical and archaeological, but wasn't the book to breathe life into the facts and offer any new insight into what the life of the 'uncivilised' peoples some might call Barbarians was really like.