Just Finished Reading: Sharpe’s Escape by Bernard Cornwell
(FP: 2004) [443pp]
Portugal, 1810. While politicians debated the prosecution,
and the cost, of the war with France in Parliament they had sent the Duke of
Wellington to Portugal to show the flag and, if necessary, leave from Lisbon in
an orderly fashion. No one expected him to fight and no one certainly expected
him to win against Napoleon’s generals. Wellington, however, had other ideas.
He was certainly willing to fight – given the ground of his choosing but he
knew that, with the forces at his disposal – both the known quantity of the
British army and the as yet unknown one of the retrained Portuguese one –
wouldn’t allow him too much latitude in any conflict. But he knew of the enemy’s
weakness: their logistics. Their supply train was both long and arduous running
as it did through territory occupied by local guerrilla bands. So through
necessity the French, as much as possible, lived off the land. Wellington meant
to stop that and that was were Captain Richard Sharpe and his men came in.
Sharpe was tasked, along with every other British officer, to deny the enemy
any chance of acquiring food and drink in their slow pursuit of the Allied
forces as they slowly retreated to Lisbon. But, where there is retreat there is
opportunity – at least for those with the guts and the avarice to take the
chance of dealing with the desperate French army for the offer of gold. When
Sharpe foils such a plan he makes a deadly enemy who dedicates himself to
Sharpe’s painful and permanent demise.
This is my first Sharpe novel in FOUR years (how
time flies!) and I’d forgotten just how entertaining they are. First there is
the authors command [grin] of the battlefield. Not only does he understand the
actual campaign itself (which translates mostly faithfully – with the usual
artist licence, this is fiction after all) but the ‘tone’ feels right in the
relationship between officers and men and the inevitable issues along the chain
of command. Along with the, as ever, brilliant soldiers dialogue it quickly
suspends disbelief and immerses you in the life of the novel. Admittedly now,
after 16 of the Sharpe novels under my belt (and with a 17th already
in the review pile) it did feel, almost throughout the whole reading experience,
like coming home. It was both a delightful and comforting experience. The two
actual battles – a large one near the start and an element of a shorter one
near the end – were both interesting and exciting as Sharpe (later on) got his ‘mojo’
back and cleverly kicked some French arse. But between the battles most of the
book revolved around a confinement (hence the title of the book) followed by a
return to the lines across hostile territory. Along that journey we are
introduced (or reintroduced) to a Portuguese officer - Captain Jorge Vicente - who knew Sharpe previously and what has to be
one of my favourite subsidiary characters in a Sharpe novel for a while – the
English governess Sarah Fry who was a brilliant invention and I loved to see
her go through the experience of confinement with Sharpe, Harper and Vicente,
escape and grow throughout the rest of the journey to Lisbon. She most
definitely made me smile (and often laugh out loud) every time she appeared on
the page! Overall this was a cracking read. Being a war novel there is a deal
of fighting, killing and dying and some of it is passing brutal – especially where
Sharpe’s enemy Luis Ferreira is concerned – who is a NASTY piece of work - but those who have read Sharpe before know
that his enemies do not prosper, oh they do not…. I had a great deal of fun re-familiarising
myself with Richard Sharpe and will endeavour to finish the series this year.
Definitely recommended.
7 comments:
i've read 4 or 5 of these and liked them. you're right about the off-putting brutality; that's why i haven't read more of him, probably... i'll to consult my alter ego and see what he says...(joke, i think, maybe...)
I hope to become acquainted with this author this year.
This one has one of my favorite Sharpe quotes -- Sharp muses that he doubts he called an officer illegitimate, saying "I probably called him a bastard."
@ Mudpuddle: Unfortunately to be realistic these sort of things need at least occasional brutality.... But I know what you mean.
@ Judy: As well as his Napoleonic series there is a Saxon series too, plus a number of stand alone books. He's rather prolific!
@ Stephen (you do keep showing up as 'unknown' for some reason): That line really made me laugh! The dialogue throughout his books - and not just from Sharpe himself - is one of the delights of his books.
It would have been slightly funnier, I think, if Sharpe has said "I wouldn't have used that kind of language" instead of "I wouldn't have used that kind of word". XD
I show up as Unknown when I post from work. For some reason my browser there is confused as to what Google account I'm logged in to. I've logged out of one and logged into the other, but it insists on trying to load the old one, anyway! It's an odd thing.
@ Stephen: Cool! That's ONE mystery solved anyway [grin] Technology is a wonderful thing - when it works. BTW - I guess you've noticed my 'Napoleonic' tag/label? Hopefully I'll be adding to both of our understanding of that wide ranging conflict in the months/years ahead.
Oh, and I apologise in advance for the books I'm confident will end up on your Mount Doom future TBR.
Oof, you should see my goodreads "Want to Read" list. It grows and grows. XD Looking forward to more Bonaparte! I'm planning on continuing in that Howard series soon, but I need to get January off to a good start -- 2 science books and 2 TBR books, THEN the historical fiction. ;)
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