I find this book quite hard to rate. The truth is, this is a solid 5 star piece of work. The research which has gone into this really shows in Moffat's thorough examination of the event. As an academic with a pretty sound knowledge of the Wars of Independence I also have no disagreement with the narrative other than the occasional minor interpretation of an event. For example Moffat takes the Declaration of Arbroath to be a statement of nationalism from the time of writing and I disagree with that. These are only minor issues to be debated however and there are no issues with regards to factual accuracy.
My biggest issue is that it is difficult to tell exactly where Moffat has sourced his information as, asides from the Bibliography at the back, there are no references throughout the book. I can see why he has done this. References would make the book look like a text book and would perhaps be off putting to some people. However, one would imagine that anyone picking up a book such as this probably has some experience in reading history books anyway.
My favourite thing about the book is its writing style. The book is very clear, laid out extremely well, and is really easy to follow. In fact I already have another couple of Moffat's books in my to read pile and this alone has bumped them up my priority list.
4/5 stars.