Series hero Richard Sharpe fights in Britain’s 1813 invasion of southern France.
Major Sharpe is a fictional rifleman who has risen from the ranks and gained the respect of his commanding generals, even when he disobeys them. A brutal and intelligent fighter, he is an expert at “slaughtering Crapauds.” Indeed, his clothes and boots come from dead French soldiers. To cross into France from Portugal, British engineers must construct a pontoon bridge across the River Nive without alerting the enemy, and Sharpe is ordered to eliminate the picquets, or sentries, on the other side—and “get to the guns and butcher the bastards.” Lord Wellington also brings in the British Navy, building up to the climactic clash that becomes known as the Battle of Saint-Pierre, said to be one of the most brutal of the war. And Sharpe is in the thick of the maelstrom, hacking away with gusto at the blue-coated columns even while one of the two British commanders orders his troops to retreat. That is Sir Nathaniel Peacock, a real historical lieutenant colonel described as a mountebank, a popinjay, and a poltroon. He is the antithesis of men who rise by merit, and his cowardice could lead to defeat by the forces of French Marshal Soult. But there is a lot to be afraid of, with thousands of men meeting their maker in mists of blood and screaming for their mothers. And Major Richard Sharpe? He is in his element, doing “the one thing he knew he was good at.” In fact, he dreads the prospect of eventual peace and a return to civilian life with his wife, Jane, having no skills that won’t land him in prison or the gallows. But he needn’t worry about peace any time soon, because Waterloo awaits. This 24th Sharpe yarn captures a down-and-dirty view of the Napoleonic Wars.
Gripping historical adventure, not for the faint of heart.