A living ledger of 17th-century kirk life. Plain records reveal human truth. The Session Book of Bunkle and Preston, 1665-1690 compiles kirk session transcripts and historical church minutes that lay bare the routines and reckonings of parish existence. As surviving scottish parish records and seventeenth-century documents from the Borders, the entries show how neighbours negotiated charity, discipline and doctrine. Readers encounter the language of presbyterian church history and find testimony to religious dissent in scotland alongside everyday administration; the result is a source at once narrative and documentary. Its granular entries capture decisions about care, complaint and conformity, so that scholars tracing law, ritual or social ties can follow the workings of authority in microcosm. Useful for genealogy research scotland, illuminating 17th-century scotland and serving as an academic historical reference, the book appeals equally to newcomers intrigued by early communities and to specialists tracing legal, social or ecclesiastical threads. The cadence of the minutes is spare but vivid; even casual readers meet the tensions of duty and dissent without jargon. Long valued within early modern scottish studies, the session book occupies a central place in borders region history and in reconstructions of local governance records. It supplies primary material on parish procedure and popular belief, and its everyday details enrich broader debates about church power, community identity and the expressions of religious dissent. Republished by Alpha Editions in a careful modern edition, this volume preserves the spirit of the original while making it effortless to enjoy today - a heritage title prepared for readers and collectors alike. Faithful to the sources while prioritising readability, this edition suits both casual reading and rigorous consultation: a readable portal for those curious about the past, and a durable collectible for classic-literature collectors, local historians and library collections. Its provenance and authenticity make it attractive to collectors who value primary sources of church life and to institutions building early modern Scottish collections.