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Sharpe's Siege (Magna Large Print Series)

Sharpe's Siege (Magna Large Print Series)

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Sharpe's Seige: Sharpe Trapped in France
Review: 'Sharpe's Siege' is a wonderful novel in Bernard Cornwell's multi-volumed work. This time Sharpe is under orders to take a French coastal fort with the help of the British navy. Eventually, Sharpe finds himself stranded in the fort thanks to the machinations of his old nemisis Pierre Ducos. With his back to the sea Sharpe adopts, what else, a cunning strategy to deafeat the French and save his men. A real highlight in the series and lot of fun.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Sharpe's Seige: Sharpe Trapped in France
Review: 'Sharpe's Siege' is a wonderful novel in Bernard Cornwell's multi-volumed work. This time Sharpe is under orders to take a French coastal fort with the help of the British navy. Eventually, Sharpe finds himself stranded in the fort thanks to the machinations of his old nemisis Pierre Ducos. With his back to the sea Sharpe adopts, what else, a cunning strategy to deafeat the French and save his men. A real highlight in the series and lot of fun.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Richard Sharpe fights on...
Review: Bernard Cornwell gives another solid adventure novel from his Sharpe series, the military counterpart to Forester's celebrated Hornblower novels. In this story, Sharpe is dispatched with the Royal Navy to capture a coastal fort and a few dozen luggers. Napoleon's spymaster, Major Ducos, learns of his bitter enemy's presence and schemes to trap him, and succeeds in marooning Sharpe in his fortress. The "Siege" follows, as Sharpe stands off a force of 2000 crapauds plus artillery, with little more than 200 Riflemen and Marines, and his own will to win.

On the minus side, longtime Sharpe confidant and British spymaster Michael Hogan dies of fever. I believe that Cornwell handled this matter poorly. Hogan's death was consistent with Napoleonic reality (many more soliders died of disease than wounds back then), but it was anti-climactic - and it was anti-climactic because Hogan's death was used to create anxiety in Sharpe that his new wife would also die of the fever. Basically, Cornwell bumped off a long-standing, well-developed character in a poorly developed fashion to make the hero anxious about a new, underdeveloped character. That is bad writing.

If Cornwell's Sharpe serial has any general failing, it is in how cookie-cutter all his novels are. If you are reviewing one of them, you are basically reviewing all of them. There is rarely ANY variation from his standard plot and character archtypes. Just ONCE I would like to see Sharpe get into trouble because of a otherwise competent superior's honest mistake (or the brilliance of the enemy - imagine that!) and not because said superior is an incompetent, corrupt, cowardly, arrogant bumbler.

However, even if Cornwell is formulaic, it is a thoroughly enjoyable formula. History buffs, fans of swash and buckle, and anyone who has enjoyed Forester's Hornblower will just love this stuff.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Best in Series
Review: Hands down, my favorite of the Sharpe series. Major Sharpe and some of his Rifle regiment are sent to help take a French coastal fort that defends access to a number of small craft the Navy needs to capture to make a huge pontoon bridge for the invasion of France. Of course there's a French spy, a pompous and greedy British Naval officer, an American privateer, Sharpe's wife possibly dying from fever, and lurking behind everything, Sharpe's nemesis, French spymaster Pierre Ducos. Sharpe has to leave most of his men behind (but not, of course, Harper), and easily takes the fort. However, he is stranded on land with a company of Marines and must suddenly hole up in the flimsy fort and hope for salvation. This is Cornwell at his best, inventing a non-historic situation for Sharpe, taking him out of his natural element, presenting him with overwhelming odds, and then having him improvise his way to victory. The siege is a wonderfully frantic affair, as Sharpe must contend with overwhelming enemy numbers, low ammunition, and a crumbling defense. Great stuff.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Tne Best of the Sharpe Series
Review: It becomes quite clear to me that Bernard Cornwell must have an incompetent agent because any one of his novels have better dialogue, stronger characters, more vivid settings, and by far, more exciting action than an entire year's worth of the [junk] that Hollywood puts out. The Sean Bean series, while ably acted, was a travesty to the scale and the detail of Cornwell's books. You can't low budget Cornwell. If they can throw 100 million bucks to turn a one dimensional comic book character into a movie then they can certainly risk some on Cornwell. Russell Crowe would be nice.
This book is exciting from beginning to end with a cliffhanger escape for Sharpe as thrilling as any I've seen. Cornwell also pokes a little fun at Sharpe's gullibility which is a humorous (and welcome) popping of the bubble of this man's iron immortality.
Personally I have found the Warlord series to be Cornwell's best writing but this book is one of his best.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: They're like Doritos: you can't read just one
Review: It seems impossible to me to review any *one* book of this series. All the ones I've read so far -- this was the latest -- have been more or less interchangeable. Sharpe fights huge battles. Sharpe deals with army politics. Sharpe sleeps with gorgeous woman X, Y, or Z. Sergeant Harper wastes a bunch of Frenchies. However, don't take that as a criticism. These books are great. They're wildly entertaining and Cornwell seems to have a very good grasp on the events, tactics and battlefield realities of the Napoleonic Wars. In each installment, our heroes survive hairsbreadth escapes, the reader learns a little more early 19th century Continental military trivia, and battle scenes both thrilling and gory abound. What more could anyone want? They're not great literature, but they sure are entertaining.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Very Good
Review: It's 1814 and Napoleon's conquest is nearing its finish, Englishman Major Richard Sharpe is assigned to take the fortress of Teste de Buch. The fortress is deep inside enemy territory and close to the strategic city of Bordeaux. The task is to take the fortress, secure the route to Bordeaux and determine if the city will capitulate to the British. However, things do not go as planned. While taking the fortress, Shape frees an American pirate (French sympathizer) Captain Killick. Which earns him the enmity of Captain Bampfylde, the officer in charge of this mission. Later, after Sharpe leads an attack outside of Bordeaux he is abandoned by Captain Bampfylde. That leaves Sharpe stuck inside the fortress while the French lay siege. Sharpe is surrounded by Napoleon's forces and trapped deep in enemy territory. Things are hopeless, until...

Bernard Cornwell writes good books. He is fun to read and his stores are always packed with adventure, action and intrigue. As with all of Sharpe books they keep you interested until the end. I have trouble putting them down. Cornwell's style is fast paced plots and he keeps the story going, you may guess the ending but who cares, half the fun is getting there.

If this is your first Sharpe book don't let it be your last, Sharpe's Eagle or Sharpe's Company are among the best in the series. However, all of Cornwell's Sharpe books are good reads, you will not be disappointed.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Boring
Review: On Sharpe's series in general

The deeds of a seemingly indestructible British officer, largely with Wellington's campaigns as historical background.
Like an 1800's Rambo, Richard Sharpe's saga starts depicting a rich and humane character carrying his share of both strengths and weaknesses, but as the series goes on becomes harder distinguishing him from John Wayne.
What started as a nonetheless informative compilation of historical clichés on the Napoleonic period (Indians only good for quarreling each other, bone-headed Frenchmen marching always in columns to the butchery, Spaniards as incompetent as treacherous, etc) becomes boring for anybody like myself, not convinced of the intellectual, technological and moral superiority of the Anglo-Irish stock.

On this particular book

The cherry on the top is a blatant attempt to win over the American market, through the outrageous invention of "Cornelius Killick" an American privateer through which Sharpe rediscovers the affinity between "people who speaks the same language". Please ...

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: There's really no point in reveiwing this
Review: or any Sharpe book from the original run other than "Rifles."

It's Sharpe

You love it.

You'll buy it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Sharpe just doesn't get any better than this....
Review: There are a few of the Sharpe books a fan would consider as being the best of the best: this is one of them.

On only (I think) three occasions does Sharpe fight a battle which doesn't appear in the history books: a completely imaginary conflict which cannot rely on any preconceived notions of "how it really went".

And Cornwell does it brilliantly. He takes Sharpe out of our comfort zone - away from his beloved Riflemen - and pops him into a no-win situation.

Ducos is weaving his dangerous plots, the Royal Navy is represented by a money-hungry imcompetent coward, Harper has his six-barreled gun, there are Royal Marines, a thousand or so French troops, American privateers, and a decrepit fort set against a dangerous coast.

What more could you want?

Oh, yes: a battle. And what a battle it is. One of Sharpe's best. And the wonderful thing is... we know he's going to escape, even though the odds are insurmountable.

There's a cliche seen all-too-often on the back of books: usually written by Clive Cussler, the words are "A roller-coaster ride! (Insert another author's name here) look out - you've got serious competition!"

Well, it's a description that tells part of the tale. Once again, Cornwell delivers more than just a great, rollicking adventure. He tells a complex story which exposes more of Sharpe's ambitions, dreams, and fears.

All of Bernard Cornwell's Sharpe books are good. Some are very good. And there are three which are simply superb: this is one of them.


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