Just Finished Reading: Azincourt by Bernard Cornwell (FP: 2008)
England in the Year 1413 and Nicholas Hook has just failed
to commit murder. Luckily for him his skill as an archer is more in demand than
his body hanging from the end of a rope. But when he tries to save a heretics
life he goes too far and is forced to run to France to join a company of archers
who are unaware of his past. Stationed in the French city of Soissons he
becomes one of the few who survive the fall of the city. Fleeing with a French
nun he manages to return to the English lines only to be inducted into the
great army of Henry V who is the rightful King of England and France – not that
a great number of the French would agree with him. When the siege of Harfleur
takes much longer than expected and dysentery thins the armies ranks the King
decides to make for safe ground in Calais. Checked every step of the way by
superior French forces the river Somme is finally crossed and Calais only days away.
But the French have blocked the road and offer battle near a small settlement
known as Azincourt, soon to become known across all Christendom as a place
where arrows flew and the nobility of France fell.
Many of my readers will know that I am a serious fan of
Bernard Cornwell. Indeed I think that this is the 25th novel of his
I’ve read. Richard Sharpe, the hero of the Sharpe series of books based in the Napoleonic
wars of the 19th century, is one of my all-time favourite characters.
Likewise I have greatly enjoyed Cornwell’s Grail series (which takes place at
the beginning of the Hundred Years war) and the Warlord Chronicles series based
around the legend of King Arthur. I was rather surprised therefore that I didn’t
enjoy Azincourt anywhere as much as I’d expected. Part of it was the main
character Nick Hook was more than a little formulaic in my opinion. The way he
picked up the French nun Melisande had too many echoes of both the experience
of Thomas Hookton and Sharpe himself. The threat from both external and
internal enemies I found more than a little predictable and it did feel at
times that the author was going through a checklist of literary devices to
produce what felt like a modular novel. I don’t know, maybe reading 10 books
based in the same period (even if that lasted 1000 years) was just too much and
I had become bored by the whole thing. Maybe I was just in a phase of my
reading when I was a bit too critical rather than simply relaxing into the
story and let it carry me along. Maybe I’m just getting old and cranky. Maybe I’ve
just read too much. But whatever it was this novel felt like it had been phoned
in and lacked the usual Cornwell sparkle I have come to know and trust. It is
certainly the first Cornwell book that, when I closed the covers, I didn’t have
a smile on my face. Not that this has put me off reading more of his work in
the future. One reasonable book after 24 excellent ones certainly won’t stop me
being a huge fan of his work.
2 comments:
I almost always imagine the main protagonist as Richard Sharpe in some way or another -- Richard Sharpe with a bow, Richard Sharpe with a sword...largely because Cornwell's central character is usually built with the same strengths and weaknesses: frightfully good at soldiering, good at thinking for himself and fighting for his fellows, and laughably weak in the face of a charming lady. That's downplayed when he writes novels with a set of strong characters ("The Fort", say) instead of those dominated by The Guy...who is Richard Sharpe.
[grin]
It's a good job that Sharpe is such a great character then....! [lol]
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