Customer Reviews
Much-loved book, brilliant - By: Iceni, 27 Nov 2008 
This book is brilliantly practical - maps, photos, field notes. You can take it with you on weekends away, holidays - find places you would never have thought of otherwise. And Cope acknowledges the spiritual power of the places - is infectiously enthusiastic & committed about the whole experience. The design of the book is special too - bright orange cover, with blue shiny bits, & an outer casing - it's a good object, not just content. Worth the price.
I can't believe I haven't reviewed this book already! - By: chris, 25 Mar 2007 
My title says it all, I have had it for eons & forgot to tell anybody what I thought about it, how selfish. Simply I think this is a MUST READ for prehistory monument geeks like myself who want to make that spiritual contact with the ancestorsin the ancient world. (You know who you are) It is writtenin the most user-friendly style I have ever come acrossin this kind of subject area, that is an immediate attraction for myself. A refreshing change from all the more serious academic stuff I have had to endure. I would like to meet Julian Cope someday just to say thanks for opening this door, saw him at a Leeds (supporting a Queen gig) once under less endearing circumstances, would like to apologise for that as well & thank him for such an amazing piece of work. Read it please & growin your knowledge.
Arch Drude - By: , 17 May 2005 
This book is bloody brilliant. Everyone should own a copy.
Apart from the fact that it will make you visit some excellent sites never thought aboutin your wildest dreams, it is enlightening, & most thoughtful.
Julian Cope is a great writer, & werein not for this book I would never have visited Castlerigg - which has to be the best stone circlein the UK.....A real killer of a book!
Nearly...but not quite - By: Keith, 02 Jul 2004 
Julian Cope spent eight years writing this. You would think that with eight years he might have figured out a better system of presenting his work. I am constantly perplexed by his geographical groupings of sites & his brief notes on them. Don't get me wrong - I am grateful that he has spent so much time on a subject he clearly loves as much as I do but; he could have made a guide that gives the reader more in-depth detail along with a structure based on a geography that doesn't lump vast areas into one section. Perhaps the best thing to come out of this book is the related web-site which gives the enthusiast more sites of interest & therefore makes this subject more accessible.
Overall, do buy this book as a taster; do not expect it to be exhaustivein its coverage - get out there & experience the mystery of prehistoric Britain for yourself.
Paranormal in the West Country, and beyond - By: derek baldwin, 16 Dec 2003 
Our Passionate Friend Julian Cope surprised us allin the 1990's by suddenly coming out as a megalithomaniac. The Modern Antiquarian is partly Julian's very personal take on ancient Britain & how the church & those pesky Romans ballsed it all up for us & partly a gazetteer of ancient sites around Britain, complete with directions, maps, idle jottings & some marvellous photographs.
The gazetteer is arranged geographically with each section colour-coded for ease of reference. Unfortunately some of the background colours are so dense that the print becomes difficult to read. In part onein particular there are some garishly photoshopped images laid outin various eccentric styles so that no two pages look quite the same. But these add to the charm of the book & what it might lackin academic rigour it makes up forin sheer enthusiasm. The binding of the book has comein for some criticism although my own copy is still allin one piece despite constant reference for 4 years or so now.
Cope lists many sites I would never have known about let alone have visited were it not for The Modern Antiquarian. The bizarre Figsbury Ring, near Salisbury, is a good example. There are some other sites listed & described here that I may have been put off from visiting had I not double-checked elsewhere.
Some of the material is already quite dated & some is just downright inaccurate. The entry on Stoney Littleton really needs to be updated as things have improved immeasurably at this site. The information on The Chestnutsin Kent needs some revising & correction. I'm sure there are many others besides.
But whatever the imperfections this is a marvellous & very worthwhile book, funny, informative, at times angry & passionate, always opinionated & all the better for that.
I believe a follow-up, looking at sites across Europe, is now being written; maybe this will carry some updates & corrections. But either way I look forward to it & recommend The Modern Antiquarian to you without hesitation.