What a tedious book. Calling this a Traveller's History of Scotland is a mistake. No traveler wants to read this book before going to Scotland. The author crams as many very detailed facts about Scotland (beginning with the formation of the freaking earth) into this short book. It's confusing and boring with run-on sentences and, weirdly, placed, commas. If you're going to Scotland, do not read this book. It's a bunch of names (and since most of the history is about the royal people, it's usually two different names with all their titles) and after a while you cease to give a shit about who did what to whom when. The only chapters I found vaguely interesting were the ones dealing with famous historical people I already knew a little about (Robert the Bruce, William Wallace, "Bonnie" Prince Charlie, the Young Pretender). A good traveler's history of Scotland would have given an overview of Scottish history with highlights on the most most important events and people. Not name everyone and everything that happened since the Picts. Also, this good traveler's history of Scotland would have pointed out specific areas of history to the tourist who wants to be well-informed; such as, if you travel to Edinburgh, you'll be interested to know that this, this and this happened here. A traveler's history arranged by the region would have been much helpful to me than this info dump. As it is, I didn't really retain anything I read because it was way too much. So...if you're traveling to Scotland and want to know something about the history of the region, do not read this book!