I started this book almost a decade ago, the first time I visited the Lindisfarne area. I wanted to get some background to Lindisfarne and its gospels, which are especially famous exemplars of the "illuminated manuscripts" prepared at monasteries throughout present day Ireland, Scotland, and England. The book is written by perhaps the top scholar of the manuscripts and is very thorough. It reads like a set of academic papers that have been edited for continuity. The illustrations are wonderful, as are the first chapters on the background and historical context of Lindisfarne and its gospels. When the book moves to a detailed examination of the gospels themselves and the historical/graphical characteristics of the text, it does a deep dive that is both hard to follow or remember. They are clearly intended for other experts on the scholarship around these documents. That is OK, of course, but it does not make for a good general read or provide much more for a would be tourist than can be obtained by a judicious web search. It is also a large size book, although not too long and a bit difficult to lug around. I suspect that there are other accounts of the Lindisfarne Gospels that are amenable to kindle or some other digital reader. Still, I am glad I finally finished it.