It looks like a coffee table book and is filled with many photographs like such a one, but this is a cut above the usual. An intelligent and extensive review of the Dead Sea Scrolls, it covers their discovery, study, and controversial dissemination. It reviews the eleven caves wherein they and other artifacts were recovered, detailing the contents of the major scrolls and scroll reconstructions. It also discusses the Qumran and other, nearby remains, reviewing the controversies regarding them and their possible relationships with the scrolls, their authors and their readers. Enough of an historical background is provided to situate these remains, archaeological and paleographical, and ground the controversies which surround them.
Don't expect a definitive exposition. This is a review of a still rather open field of study, not a scholarly contribution to such a field. Insofar as one comes away with a 'conclusion' it is that late Temple Judaism was much, much more variegated than hitherto imagined.