I purchased this at the Orkney museum in Kirkwall and would have appreciated the exhibits there, which are marvellous by the way, all the more if I'd read this first. It's a very capable potted history of Orkney from the earliest times, arguably the most interesting, with the usual, and I suppose inevitable, emphasis on "great men" as we near the present day. After discussing each era the author provides a gazetteer of sites, which frequently repeats or embellishes upon information given in the text preceding. The prose is a little mundane and there are some silly typos etc that more careful proofreading would have picked up, which means this falls a little short of being excellent, but definitely worth owning and reading. A better index and a glossary, or just a few footnotes, would have helped as well: I'd never heard of the run-rig system for example and had to resort to Wikipedia to find out what it was.