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A book about Kilmartin, a decent Scottish, archaeology rich rendition, that doesn't cost too much. So if there are any ideas out there as to a title to hunt..please ;)
In fact any decent archaeological book on Scotland as well, I know there are probably lots out there but a starting place would be helpful....

The Kilmartin House Trust published a big soft-backed glossy book called "Kilmartin - Scotland's Richest Prehistoric landscape - An Introduction and Guide " by Rachel Butters with photographs by David Lyons.
At about 110 pages it is NOT an exhaustive survey or a particularly detailed exploration of the area. It is very well illustrated and covers the Kilmartin Valley's main sites and looks at it in the wider context of Argyll.

It is here for the princely sum of £8.90 with free delivery.

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Kilmartin-Scotlands-Prehistoric-Landscape-Introduction/dp/095336741X


It is worth buying for the Foreword by Marion Campbell of Kilberry who wrote up a seminal study on Kilmartin - "Mid Argyll : A Field Survey of the Historic and Prehistoric Monuments" back in 1963. In the foreword she explains how her original 1963 study listed and covered 640 sites, a catalogue of finds, four distribution maps and a graph of heights. Sadly Marion is no longer with us but she tells us her original field report was "the product of two untrained women's scanty leisure with a notebook, a six foot steel tape and a 33 foot suveyor's tape".
Another book you might want to have a wee look at is "Stone Voices" by Neal Ascherson. He writes about Kilmartin (and many other things scottish) and he writes about Marion Campbell's last days in the hospital at Oban with humour and heart. He describes Marion as "an historian, novelist and poet; she was a patriot antiquary, a sailor in war, and a farmer in peace; she was the mother of scientific archaeology and of community museums in Mid-Argyll"
Marion Campbell also solved a mystery regarding the fallen Ballymeanoch stone. "It was in 1943 and a Shetland Pony was sheltering up against it from a storm when it broke off. Must have terrified the poor beast! Nobody would believe me that I remembered that stone when it was up and how I used to look through the hole."

Historic Scotland's "Neolithic and Bronze Age Scotland" by P.J. Ashmore and to find sites and with good site descriptions "Guide to Prehistoric Scotland" by Richard Feachem (both by Batsford)

Thanks everyone for the recommendations, I'm going to make a list, for some reason the name David McKie keeps going through my head, but I think I've got the wrong spelling..

This book has it all:

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Kilmartin-Prehistoric-Early-Historic-Monuments/dp/1902419030/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1307288280&sr=1-1

If you get this book, you wont need any other (about Kilmartin).

And for the soundtrack... :-)

http://www.musicinscotland.com/acatalog/The_Kilmartin_Sessions_The_Sounds_of_Ancient_Scotland_CD.html

Someone may have already given you a link to this book but if not: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Kilmartin-Scotlands-Prehistoric-Landscape-Introduction/dp/095336741X/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1307363898&sr=8-1

I bought it from Kilmartin Museum last year and it's the best one on offer in terms of offering great content and illustrations.

Stunning place. Hoping to work on some paintings of this whole area soon.