Tuesday, 14 October 2014

Sharpe's Honour - utter bliss!

I feel like I am in danger of running out of superlatives regarding the fabulous Mr Bernard Cornwell, particularly with regard to the ever brilliant series featuring Richard Sharpe. Within the first few sentences of Sharpe's Honour, I wanted to sing and dance for joy. This book totally transported me to the time and place of its setting (Spain, 1813). The sights, the smells, the politics, the brutality, even the weather are all beautifully and viscerally portrayed as usual, which is what makes reading such books a totally immersive experience! Our hero, Major Richard Sharpe, has been devastated by the recent murder of his wife and is drifting through life in a fog of guilt, despite him bringing about the demise of her murderer (Obadiah Hakeswill). With Spring around the corner,  the next phase in the military campaign to rid Spain of Napeolon's invading army is about to get underway, and Sharpe is eagerly anticipating some action to take his mind of his personal life. However, he becomes a pawn in a plot to undermine the fragile alliance between Britain and Spain - a plot hatched by Pierre Ducos, the French intelligence officer who has previously crossed swords with Sharpe and been on the losing side. Needless to say, this plot involves a beautiful woman, the French spy, La Marquesa, who Sharpe has more than a soft spot for! Sharpe is falsely accused of murder and sentenced to hang, but he is, instead, sent on a secret mission, to find out what is really going on. With enemies on all sides, can Sharpe stay alive and complete his mission with both his life and his honour intact? You become so familiar with the main characters that they become almost like your friends and family - you kind of love them, no matter what they get up to (and there's much to dislike about our hero). I am having to stop myself diving headlong into the next book of the series, because I just cannot face it ending too soon! It is books like these that are exactly what reading should be about. If you haven't yet read any Sharpe books, please, please do!

My STAR rating: FIVE.

Length: 375 print pages.
Price I paid: £1.
Formats available: print; unabridged audio CD; ebook. (NB: Unabridged audio download to be released later this month.)

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