'Using primary sources as much as possible, including data from archaeological sites and numismatics, she describes the strata of aristocracy ... The final chapter, on the "aristocratic pursuits" of hunting, hawking and feasting, is full of fascinating detail. The focus of the work is on aristocratic laymen, and it succeeds in bringing them to life ...Williams has done an excellent job.' - Book News
'While many historians have written about the politics and communities of late Anglo-Saxon England, few are able to breathe life into them with such a sense of easy familiarity.' - History Today
Providing a wealth of detail based on the author's keen understanding of the sources and the period, the book is readable, lucid and scholarly.' - Northern History
Review in Perspectivia (In French)
'A stimulating, careful, and enjoyable study of its subject; illuminated by well-chosen anecdotes and the archaeological record; and well-rooted in the sources and historiography. It is essential reading for anyone interested in the Anglo-Saxon aristocracy or, indeed, that which replaced it after 1066.' - Reviews in History