I was completely fascinated, and have been pouncing on friends and family to share interesting and important information - "hey, can I read you an interesting bit about the Badger Act of 1973?" "I didn't know badgers dig outdoor latrines, did you?" "Oh no, thanks for asking, it's not about the North American badger - or the African honey badger for that matter, which is quite different - it's about the British badger."
Barkham explores not only what we know about how badgers conduct themselves, but also how humans in the UK have conducted themselves around badgers. This includes a great deal of cruelty (baiting, gassing, culling), which was difficult to read about, but sensitively discussed. As a species, we can be really rotten. On the other hand, however, the badger has also become something of a beloved figure (think of The Wind in the Willows), and there are many people who have developed intense relationships with badgers with whom they've interacted, like a quite wonderful 80 year old woman in Essex whom Barkham visits as she feeds badgers on her patio, tossing them sandwiches with a small plastic shovel. Barkham interviews people like her, as well as scientists, farmers, and activists, and also spends a lot of time trying (not always successfully) to spot badgers for himself in the wild - those passages are magical. I didn't know anything about the badger culls (to combat bovine TB) in the UK. They are obviously hotly contested, and I thought he did a terrific job exploring the issue.