Well put together popular history. While not a biography of Elizabeth or James, the author does include enough of both ruler's lives to understand where England and Scotland were at the time of transition from Tudor to Stewart rule. Obviously ,the further back he gets, the more general the history, but the book does give the reader a good idea of where things stood in the British Isles in 1603 - politically, religiously, economically, and internationally. From there, the book moves forward into changes brought about by the death of Elizabeth and coronation of James I - in many ways, surprisingly minor, and in others, pretty dramatic. Later chapters deal with specific topics of the period - the black plague(but also medicine as practiced in the era), local and national government, the theater and poetry, religion and witchcraft (both as heresy and as a secular crime), piracy and the nascent Royal Navy, war in Ireland, changes in Japan, and the East India Company. There is also a fairly lengthy section of the downfall, trial, and execution of Sir Walter Raleigh. I feel like the author did a pretty good job of hitting the "sweet spot" for writing popular history - the general reader shouldn't feel lost but the book isn't dumbed down and includes a good selection of excerpts from primary texts (letters, legal documents, books and pamphlets, poems). 3.5 stars.