- Thread Author
- #201
SHARPE'S BATTLE : BERNARD CORNWELL
Length: 387 pages.
Genre : Historical fiction, but based on acurate historical events.
Setting : Portugal/Spain in the Napoleonic Wars in the late 18th C and early 19th C.
I chose this book because it was cheap in a secondhand bookshop and I've enjoyed the rest of the Sharpe series I've read to date. I also need to get away from the crime genre in fiction.
It is good coverage of this epoch of history. I've hardly read any fiction in the same era. The protagonists are the heroic Captain ( later Major) Sharpe and equally heroic Sergeant ( later Sergeant Major) Patrick Harper.
Sharpe is a working class lad from humble beginnings and rose through the ranks based on considerable leadership qualities and innate soldiering acumen. Harper is also a very good soldier and is a jolly fellow! They are inseparable.
The book is entertaining, as are all Cornwell's historical fiction books. Sharpe is in strife for shooting French soldiers in a firing squad for raping Portuguese villagers. Sharpe plays less of a key leadership role in the book than normal, as he is sidelined, whilst investigated.
I thought there was just a bit too much graphic violence in Sharpe's Battle. Still a very exciting read though.
Length: 387 pages.
Genre : Historical fiction, but based on acurate historical events.
Setting : Portugal/Spain in the Napoleonic Wars in the late 18th C and early 19th C.
I chose this book because it was cheap in a secondhand bookshop and I've enjoyed the rest of the Sharpe series I've read to date. I also need to get away from the crime genre in fiction.
It is good coverage of this epoch of history. I've hardly read any fiction in the same era. The protagonists are the heroic Captain ( later Major) Sharpe and equally heroic Sergeant ( later Sergeant Major) Patrick Harper.
Sharpe is a working class lad from humble beginnings and rose through the ranks based on considerable leadership qualities and innate soldiering acumen. Harper is also a very good soldier and is a jolly fellow! They are inseparable.
The book is entertaining, as are all Cornwell's historical fiction books. Sharpe is in strife for shooting French soldiers in a firing squad for raping Portuguese villagers. Sharpe plays less of a key leadership role in the book than normal, as he is sidelined, whilst investigated.
I thought there was just a bit too much graphic violence in Sharpe's Battle. Still a very exciting read though.