<p>This book is beautifully written. While it is, generally, a work of synthesis, the sources have been read afresh in the context of recent research. Barber's cool common sense gives a chance to see the religion and the society in which it became rooted in a new light. Highly recommended, but it will disappoint romantics. </p><p>Jonathan Riley-Smith, <em>Times Higher Educational Supplement</em></p><p>The book is especially notable for its careful and sensitive attempt to see the Cathars and their beliefs in a concrete, localised context. The author has done his homework on the regional geography and topography of Languedoc to good effect; the location, role and significance of the <em>castrum</em>, or fortified village, which made Catharism as much a rural as an urban heresy, is particularly well set out.</p><p>Malcolm Vale, <em>English Historical Review</em></p>