Waterloo
The Aftermath
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- USD 15.99
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- USD 15.99
Descripción editorial
After midnight, 19 June 1815...
On the battlefield more than 50,000 men and 7,000 horses lie dead and wounded; the wreckage of a once proud French Grande Armée struggles in abject disorder to the Belgian frontier pursued by murderous Prussian lancers; and Napoleon Bonaparte, exhausted and stunned at the scale of his defeat, rode through the darkness towards Paris, abdication and captivity.
In the days, weeks and months that followed, news of the battle shaped the consciousness of an age. Drawing on a multiplicity of contemporary voices and viewpoints, Paul O’Keeffe brings into focus as never before the sights, sounds and smells of the battlefield, of conquest and defeat, of celebration and riot.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
British biographer O'Keeffe (Some Sort of Genius) delivers a richly descriptive, moving, and altogether absorbing take on the consequences of Napoleon's final defeat. A large cast of onlookers, soldiers, generals, diplomats, and assorted loved ones populates this distinctive book's pages as O'Keeffe relates how the particular battle struck those who observed, survived, and mopped up after it. He spares readers nothing in his depiction of its sanguinary horrors, which rivaled the American Civil War for modern brutality on the battlefield. The book's most affecting segment concerns Napoleon in defeat; fatalistic, honorable, even noble in flight and captivity, the deposed emperor could not escape the British naval chase and Britain's determination to exile him forever to a lonely outpost far from Europe. Astonishingly, the book contains not a single map, despite the difficulty of attempting to understand either one of modern history's most consequential military battles or its aftermath without seeing how the battle unfolded. That incomprehensible defect aside, O'Keeffe's telling of Napoleon's near escape to the U.S., followed by his attempted flight to Britain itself, is suspenseful and masterful. The book ought to be read in conjunction with those of Jenny Uglow (In These Times) and Brendan Simms (The Longest Afternoon) on related subjects.