*COD & Shipping Charges may apply on certain items.
Review final details at checkout.
₹836
₹999
16% OFF
Paperback
Out Of Stock
All inclusive*
About The Book
Description
Author
Presents the biography of Napoleon who lived one of the extraordinary of all human lives. This book shows how after seizing power in a coup d'etat he ended the corruption and incompetence into which the Revolution had descended.|Andrew Roberts is a biographer and historian of international renown whose books include Salisbury: Victorian Titan (winner the Wolfson Prize for History); Masters and Commanders; and The Storm of War which reached No. 2 on the Sunday Times bestseller list. Roberts is a Fellow of the Royal Societies of Literature and Arts. He appears regularly on British television and radio and writes for the Sunday Telegraph Spectator Literary Review Mail on Sunday and Daily Telegraph.|Simply dynamite ... Roberts's fine book encompasses all the evidence to give a brilliant portrait of the man|Masterly ... a huge rich deep witty humane and unapologetically admiring biography ... gloriously enjoyable|'A Napoleonic triumph of a book irresistibly galloping with the momentum of a cavalry charge' Simon Sebag Montefiore'Simply dynamite' Bernard CornwellFrom Andrew Roberts author of the bestsellers The Storm of War and Churchill: Walking with Destiny this is the definitive modern biography of Napoleon.Napoleon Bonaparte lived one of the most extraordinary of all human lives. In the space of just twenty years from October 1795 when as a young artillery captain he cleared the streets of Paris of insurrectionists to his final defeat at the (horribly mismanaged) battle of Waterloo in June 1815 Napoleon transformed France and Europe. After seizing power in a coup d'état he ended the corruption and incompetence into which the Revolution had descended. In a series of dazzling battles he reinvented the art of warfare; in peace he completely remade the laws of France modernised her systems of education and administration and presided over a flourishing of the beautiful 'Empire style' in the arts. The impossibility of defeating his most persistent enemy Great Britain led him to make draining and ultimately fatal expeditions into Spain and Russia where half a million Frenchmen died and his Empire began to unravel.More than any other modern biographer Andrew Roberts conveys Napoleon's tremendous energy both physical and intellectual and the attractiveness of his personality even to his enemies. He has walked 53 of Napoleon's 60 battlefields and has absorbed the gigantic new French edition of Napoleon's letters which allows a complete re-evaluation of this exceptional man. He overturns many received opinions including the myth of a great romance with Josephine: she took a lover immediately after their marriage and as Roberts shows he had three times as many mistresses as he acknowledged.Of the climactic Battle of Leipzig in 1813 as the fighting closed around them a French sergeant-major wrote 'No-one who has not experienced it can have any idea of the enthusiasm that burst forth among the half-starved exhausted soldiers when the Emperor was there in person. If all were demoralised and he appeared his presence was like an electric shock. All shouted Vive l'Empereur! and everyone charged blindly into the fire.'The reader of this biography will understand why this was so.