Unfortunately, NOT my age, but the number of books I have now read during 2011. And what a great book it was too - Sharpe's Fury, by Bernard Cornwell which I read in print. This is book 11 (chronologically) of the series of books featuring Richard Sharpe - a rough, tough - and now Captain - in the British army. It's 1811, and our hero finds himself in Cadiz - the last patch of Spanish territory to hold out against Napoleon's all conquering forces. Sharpe finds himself caught up in a plot to use a set of love letters to blackmail the English ambassador (and younger brother of Lord Wellington) that could split the delicate alliance between the English and Spanish. The architect of the plot, a very unpriestly priest called Father Montseny, is desperate to inflame the locals in order to kick out the Brits and make peace with Napoleon. Into this situation comes Sharpe, fresh from battle and with a gunshot wound to the head, who is tasked with retrieving the letters, working alongside some murderously tough Irish soldiers, his trusty Sergeant Harper and a gay diplomatic spy. Needless to say - there is some dirty dealing and many scrapes along the way. The action (and what a lot of action there is) culminates with the battle at Cerro del Puerco, where the greatly outnumbered Brits, under a wonderfully heroic Scots general, face the French at the Battle of Barossa while the Spanish enjoy a picnic. Once again, Mr Cornwell brings the Napoleonic Wars to life - with fact and fiction merging into one cohesive narrative that leaves me breathless and totally satisfied in equal proportions. I have been reading the Sharpe books in sequence over the last couple of years, and this is a cracker. It's all here - adventure, politics, history, bloodshed, humour and a small smattering or romance. Superb! This is definitely a FIVE STAR rating - a thrilling read that races into my top 10 list too!
The stats bit:
Length: 376 print pages.
Price I paid: £0.00 (borrowed from the local library).
Other formats available in: Ebook; abridged audio CD; abridged audio download.
Oh yes, you can't beat a good bit of Sharp. I have this on audio book read by Paul McGann. A cracking story teller is our Bernard Cornwell.
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