My witchy, very Scottish self got excited when I saw the title for this. Buuut, then I saw it was by Buckland and published by Llewellyn, so a lot of the excitement bubbled away. I read it anyway, because I'm still a witch and a Scot and my many-greats granddad was Kenneth MacAlpine (so sayeth an extensive genealogy my grandfather and uncle collected during the 70's and 80's), so I have an interest in the Picts, too.
The book itself, overall, isn't bad. It has some decent information about the Picts and their traditions, for as much as anybody really knows about them. Or what they'd have known at the time of this publication, at the least. Buckland seemed genuinely interested in the history of the people and their practices and wasn't too fast to jump to the God and Goddess thing with them, as I'm thinking they wouldn't have had any particularly strong ties to that concept. But, Buckland IS a Wiccan, so it stands to reason that he would squeeze the God and Goddess in there somehow.
There is a decent amount of information on how to connect with Nature and to create tools for your Craft in a way that may have been more true to how the old Scots would have done it. My grandfather, for example, had a staff that he created in much the way that Buckland describes. So for the most part, I have no issues with that sort of thing.
Buckland DOES seem to want to place emphasis on ceremony, and I have a feeling the old Scots wouldn't have cared much about some of the things he tries to put "glitz" on. Again, it felt like that was the Wiccan in him trying to push into a place where such things weren't necessary.*
Still, even though he has a tendency in all his books to make it sound like you have to do it a very specific way or it isn't going to work, the book is pretty good and I do feel like the information in it is well presented. While books by this author and by this publisher do often get a bad rep, this is one I think that anybody with interest in witchcraft should read. It's a FAST read, too, so it won't take long to get through it.
*I know not all Wiccans are hung up on glitz and pageantry, but Buckland has always struck me as such. So the comments I'm making here are aimed more to him in particular and not Wiccans as a whole.