If you are a beginner starting to research the history, and practice of witchcraft in the Scottish region, then this book is a good start. It is not an overly academic tome; it reads easily and can be digested in one sitting.
The bibliography gives you material with which to widen your knowledge and there are maps and information aplenty on the various sites mentioned in the chapters, so you can take the book on tour with you.
Although the book is divided into sections, there is considerable overlapping of subject matter.
This brings me to my main quibble. The book is badly edited. The grammar is appalling and quite a few sentences are repeated within the same paragraph; and it is the same with whole subject matters, where there is a doubling up within the book and the wording appears to vary only a little. It can be somewhat jarring to the reader.
There are some matters presented as fact, which are in dispute within the historical community and the author seems to make the decision for the reader. Anyone who is genuinely interested, however, will find this out for themselves upon further research.
Still much better than many other books about Scottish magick. Well done to the author; may she find a better editor next time.