If you don't know by now, I am a HUGE fan of Bernard Cornwell. I have read many of his books and have had no regrets thus far. In this, the 15th book in the Richard Sharpe series, our hero finds himself newly promoted to Major and is given the task of rescuing two high-born ladies from the clutches of a band of French and British deserters - one of whom is Sharpe's mortal enemy, the toothless, twitching Obadiah Hakeswill. Sharpe secures the ladies, but when, with the help of his wife Teresa, one of the most feared partisan fighters, he realises that the truce that had been holding during the rescue is about to come to an end and the French are planning a massive movement of troops which would jeopardise Wellington's campaign, he sets out to thwart them. It's Christmas 1812, but that matters not one jot. Against overwhelming odds, he plans to outsmart the enemy using the only soldiers he has at his disposal - the dodgy and untested new Rocket Troop and a small band of riflemen and various scrappers that are now under his command. By sheer force of will, he brings them together into a cohesive fighting machine ready to defend the small scrap of land required by the French to pass through to the one place that would give them an advantage over Wellington's forces. Will Sharpe manage to pull off the impossible and hold out until reinforcements arrive? Well, as this isn't the last in the series I think we all know the answer to that. Once again, Mr Cornwell pulls off an exciting adventure full of blood, gore and downright nastiness smattered with enough historical facts that it feels very real. Great action, great characters and a great read. I just wish Sharpe would have as much luck in his personal life as he does his battles ... maybe next time! Oh, and it never pays to turn your back on Obadiah - you have been warned. A book that is well worth a punt.
My STAR rating: FOUR.
Length: 350 print pages.
Price I paid: £1.80.
Formats available: print; unabridged audio CD; unabridged audio download; ebook.
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