| Can I Come Look At These Items? | | This online store is in association with Amazon.com, so these great, high-qualiy products will come from their warehouse or from other partners. Thanks for shopping! |
|
|
|
Sharpe's Trafalgar: Richard Sharpe & the Battle of Trafalgar, October 21, 1805 (Richard Sharpe's Adventure Series #4) | 
enlarge | Author: Bernard Cornwell Publisher: HarperCollins Category: Book
List Price: $25.00 Buy New: $4.25 You Save: $20.75 (83%)
New (6) Used (37) Collectible (4) from $0.90
Avg. Customer Rating: 46 reviews Sales Rank: 271580
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 304 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 6.1 x 1.2
ISBN: 0060194251 Dewey Decimal Number: 823.914 EAN: 9780060194253 ASIN: 0060194251
Publication Date: May 1, 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
|
| Also Available In:
| • | Audio Cassette - Sharpe's Trafalgar | | • | Audio Download - Sharpe's Trafalgar (Unabridged) | | • | Paperback - Sharpe's Trafalgar | | • | Unknown Binding - Sharpe's Trafalgar | | • | Paperback - Sharpe's Trafalgar (Richard Sharpe's Adventure Series #4) | | • | Paperback - Sharpe's Trafalgar | | • | Paperback - Sharpe's Trafalgar: Richard Sharpe & the Battle of Trafalgar, October 21, 1805 (Richard Sharpe's Adventure Series #4) | | • | Hardcover - Sharpe's Trafalgar: Richard Sharpe & the Battle of Trafalgar, October 21, 1805 (Richard Sharpe's Adventure Series #4) | | • | Unknown Binding - Sharpe's Trafalgar - Richard Sharpe And The Battle Of Trafalgar, October 21, 1805 | | • | Audio Cassette - Sharpe's Trafalgar (Richard Sharpe's Adventure Series #4) | | • | Hardcover - Sharpe's Trafalgar (Windsor Selection) | | • | Paperback - Sharpe's Trafalgar (Paragon Softcover Large Print Books) | | • | Audio CD - Sharpe's Trafalgar (Richard Sharpe's Adventure Series #4) | | • | Hardcover - Sharpe's Trafalgar (Richard Sharpe's Adventure Series #4) | | • | Audio Cassette - Sharpe's Trafalgar: Richard Sharpe & the Battle of Trafalgar, 21 October 1805 (Richard Sharpe's Adventure Series #4) | | • | Library Binding - Sharpe's Trafalgar: Richard Sharpe and the Battle of Trafalgar, October 21, 1805 | | • | Leather Bound - Sharpe's Trafalgar | | • | Audio Download - Sharpe's Trafalgar: Book IV of the Sharpe Series | | • | Kindle Edition - Sharpe's Trafalgar | | • | Audio Download - Sharpe's Trafalgar: Book IV of the Sharpe Series (Unabridged) | | • | Hardcover - Sharpe's Trafalgar : Richard Sharpe and the Battle of Trafalgar, October 21 1805 |
|
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com Review For military-history buffs, Bernard Cornwell's Sharpe novels are the literary equivalent of potato chips: you can't read just one. And in this case, why would you want to? Blending meticulous research and old-fashioned entertainment, the series follows the roguish adventurer Richard Sharpe as he swashbuckles his way through the Napoleonic Wars. In Sharpe's Trafalgar, the author ventures into Patrick O'Brian's maritime territory. Anchors aweigh, lads, and bring on the detailed descriptions of the ship's guns and their firing mechanisms! In the beginning of the book, our hero sets sail for England after five months of service in India. The plot revolves around a disguised diplomat, a marauding French warship, and an improbable love affair with a comely English aristocrat. But make no mistake, the real draw here is combat. The battle scenes crackle with energy, and we can practically feel the chop of the waves and smell the reek of gunpowder. (We can also smell 600 unwashed men in close quarters with rats, sewage, and bilge rot, but that's another matter entirely.) The last hundred pages fly by at a furious clip, cannons pounding and cutlasses hacking, as Cornwell re-creates the naval battle of Trafalgar. These days, of course, we know that war is bloody and brutal, not honorable or fair. We like even our most appealing warriors to have some passing acquaintance with their dark side, and Sharpe does take a decidedly antiheroic stance on the experience of hand-to-hand combat: He was ashamed when he remembered the joy of it, but there was a joy there. It was the happiness of being released to the slaughter, of having every bond of civilization removed. It was also what Richard Sharpe was good at. It was why he wore an officer's sash instead of a private's belt, because in almost every battle the moment came when the disciplined ranks dissolved and a man simply had to claw and scratch and kill like a beast. Beast or no beast, Sharpe is far more interesting and complex than the musket-wielding action figure he might first appear. And it's nearly impossible not to take some pleasure at his bloody exploits. Sharpe's Trafalgar is a superb example of the ripping good yarn--it confirms our secret conviction that war may be hell, but it's actually pretty exciting too. --Mary Park
Product Description A dazzling nautical adventure that finds Bernard Cornwell's beloved ensign Richard Sharpe in the middle of one of history's most spectacular naval engagements: the battle at Cape Trafalgar off the coast of Spain.The year is 1805, and Richard Sharpe, having completed his tour in India (Sharpe's Tiger; Sharpe's Triumph; Sharpe's Fortress), is headed back to England, where he will join a newly formed regiment, the Green Jackets. Traveling aboard Captain Peculiar Cromwell's East Indiaman cargo ship, the Calliope, is the lovely Lady Grace Hale, whose regal presence may provide intrigue and distraction from what promises to be an otherwise uneventful voyage home. But nothing is uneventful in the life of Richard Sharpe, even at sea: the Calliope is captured by a formidable French warship, the Revenant, which has been terrorizing British nautical traffic in the Indian Ocean. The french warship races toward the safety of its own fleet, carrying a stolen treaty that, if delivered, could provoke India into a new war against the British -- and render for naught all that Sharpe has fought for so bravely till now. But help comes from an unexpected quarter. An old friend, a captain in the Royal Navy, is on the trail of the Revenant, and Sharpe comes aboard a 74-gun man-of-war called Pucelle in hot pursuit. Then Admiral Horatio Nelson arrives, with his magnificent fleet of twenty-seven. What results is a breathtaking retelling of one of the most ferocious and one-sided sea battles in European history, in which Nelson -- and Sharpe -- vanquish the combined naval might of France and Spain at Trafalgar.
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 41 more reviews...
Commentary on Cornwell's Books Featuring Sharpe May 29, 2008 Watch Video Here: http://www.amazon.com/review/RLRXQO2Z8UEBQ A Sharpe book is a history lesson in a sugar coated pill! In this short video I discuss who will like Cornwell's books featuring Richard Sharpe and why. Join me! Frank Derfler author of A Glint in Time [...]
Excellent Historical Fiction May 2, 2008 Cornwell is a master writer in style, depth of characters, and especially in his meticulous research of the period he is writing about. If learning history was always this much fun, I would have majored in it! Realistic descriptions of the carnage of war may spoil the books for those who cannot bear to look upon its presence through the centuries.
Great change of pace after the India books October 16, 2007 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
An homage to Patrick O'Brian's "Master and Commander", the series based on the British Navy of the same period. The fan of both will see numerous similarities.
Sharpe's new friend, Captain Joel Chase, is the spitting image of Jack Aubrey. He's a bluff, good-natured fighting captain whose men would follow him through the gates of Hell, and he personally feels the same way about Admiral Lord Nelson. Sound familiar? He rarely flogs erring sailors. He loves his coffee. He pays for extra powder and shot out of his own pocket so that his crew can practice gunnery. And he's loyal to friends like Sharpe, who comes to Chase's rescue during a Bombay brawl with a dishonest merchant who cheated them both.
There are other touches as well. Sharpe's struggle to climb the masts and perhaps avoid using the maintop's "lubber hole" refers to the same running gag about Stephen Maturin, Aubrey's friend and intrepid but without sealegs.
Sharpe, a soldier, doesn't really belong at Trafalgar. But Cornwell contrives a plausible way to get him there, as Sharpe returns to Britain in 1805 to join a rifles regiment. The India books were fun but, after we've seen all those city walls stormed, all those rajahs plundered, and all those hideous Oriental tortures meted out, it's time to move on. Putting Sharpe on a ship, with its backstays and quarterdecks and scuppers pouring blood during battle, is a fine change of pace.
Cornwell's battle detail is typically gripping. And in this book Sharpe finds a romance that, one senses, may be more fateful than those he's had in previous books.
Sharpe at Trafalgar- You must be kidding!! September 22, 2007 I took out this book from the library because I had read Sharpe's Rifles and Sharpe at Waterloo and had liked both of them. But Sharpe at Trafalgar, you must be kidding! Anyway, Sharpe had to get home from India in 1805, so he ends up at Trafalgar. The book works and I could not stop reading it. Two nights I stayed up til 1:00 am reading this book. Highly recommended for a great fun read.
On the way home from India Sharpe gets caught up in the Battle of Trafalgar June 15, 2007
Only Richard Sharpe could get caught up in a fleet battle on the way home from India and find romance on a Royal Navy line-of-battle ship. But he does, and it's a highly entertaining read.
Sharpe's Trafalgar is set at the conclusion of the trilogy of novels in India in which he obtains some treasure, gets promoted to be an officer after saving the life of General Wellesley (the future Duke of Wellington), and deals with the traitor Dodd. Shipping home to join the 95th Rifles, Sharpe initially takes passage on an East Indiaman, and finds an old opponent as one of the passengers. Treachery follows and the ship is captured by the French.
However, as the story is about Sharpe's Trafalgar, we know that he will not remain a prisoner of war for long. And sure enough, after an involved series of events, including the obligatory rescue of a lady in distress, Sharpe and his fellow passengers find themselves guests on a Royal Navy 74 gun ship of the line, chasing a French battleship half-way round the world. Until both ships arrive off Cape Trafalgar on 21st October 1805 ...
As usual Bernard Cornwell has done a great deal of research so that the Napoleonic era battles he describe seem real, and in the historical note at the end he explains that many of the events described during the battle of Trafalgar were based on things which really happened.
The next novel after this in the chronological sequence is "Sharpe's Prey," the main action of which is set two years later in 1807 when Napoleon's continental blockade results in war between Britain and Denmark. That book also tells you what happens to Sharpe's relationship with Grace, the heroine of "Sharpe's Trafalgar".
If you liked the other Sharpe books, you will like this one.
|
|
| | |