Author:Charles Esdaile
No other soldier has provoked as much anger or as much fervour as Napoleon Bonaparte. Was he a monster, driven on by an endless, ruinous quest for military adventure – or was he a social and political visionary, brought down by petty reactionaries clinging to their privileges?
Charles Esdaile’s major new work reframes our understanding of Napoleon. Napoleon’s Wars looks beyond the insatiable greed for glory to create a new, genuinely international context for Napoleon’s career. The battles themselves Esdaile sees as almost side-effects, the consequences of rulers being willing to take the immense risks of fighting or supporting Napoleon – risks that could result in the extinction of entire countries and regimes.
'Scenes rivalling the best of D. H. Lawrence'
—— Daily Telegraph'Truly exciting'
—— Daily Mail'Splendidly conveys...compassion, excitement, entertainment'
—— Evening StandardVividly readable... Leslie Thomas is one of nature's life enchancers
—— Sunday ExpressA fine storyteller
—— Sunday TelegraphIt is the vividness of his recall, his feel for emotion and ability to pinpoint people and place that make this such a compelling read
—— Publishing News