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Evening all.....

Just wondering, as I sit here browsing through the Tempus Books website, which books you find the most useful for research and general interest? I have arange of books covering prehistoric Europe & Britain but I am always on the lookout for more.

For fieldwork, I tend to stick to Burl (easy to carry, for one thing!) and I have a number of books about Scotland, as that and Cumbria tend to be my stamping grounds but just wondering if the rest of you have any recommendations?......and also any "keep well back" advice?

I'll hold back from buying any more until I hear from you all

Cheers

vx

Vicster wrote:
Just wondering, as I sit here browsing through the Tempus Books website,
Good place to start. If you wait around until September and then pop over to their daughter company ,Nonsuch Publishing, you'll see my book :-)

I don't buy many new books these days.

There's a couple of books I recommend, if your going to Loughcrew when in Meath (there's no good excuse not too!) then 'The Stones of Time' by Martin Brennan is half a great read, the accounts of the observations in Loughcrew and breaking in to Knowth are truly fascinating but the interpretation part of the book lost me after about three pages.

http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/0892815094/026-4424955-0986842?v=glance&n=266239

'Inside the Neolithic Mind' is also quite thought provoking, it deals with the tail end of the mesolithic and beginnings of the neolithic with well made arguments though it only touches some sites in Turkey and the east and west coasts of Ireland. The section on the Boyne Valley is particularly good.

http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/0500051380/026-4424955-0986842?v=glance&n=266239

Despite his many detractors M. J. O'Kelly's book 'Newgrange: Archaeology, Art and Legend' is much more than an archaeological report, his amazement and awe at the monument and its builders jumps from the pages and his arguments are well made and logical. Read it and make your own mind up, whatever you think of the restoration I haven't seen any other arguments for what it looked like originally made as well as in this book, I really enjoyed reading it. If you come across what looks like its counterpart for Knowth by George Eogan beware, the only one currently available deals only with the later settlements at Knowth long after the mounds had slipped into disuse.

http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/0500273715/026-4424955-0986842?v=glance&n=266239