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Paperback Napoleon: The Emperor of Kings Book

ISBN: 033049001X

ISBN13: 9780330490016

Napoleon: The Emperor of Kings

(Book #3 in the Napoleon Series)

It is 1806 and Napoleon is master of an empire covering half of Europe. He subdues kings, conquers woman, and defies the Pope himself over the Continental Blockade. In this dazzling mix of history and... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Format: Paperback

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Gallo's essential Napoleonic perspective part 3

One of my personal goals is to read every known work of fiction dealing directly with, or having significant bearing, on the Age of Napoleon. See my separate lists and guides for an overall orientation. Including this book, Max Gallo has written an ingenious and significant work of fiction of four volumes spanning the inner life of Napoleon Bonaparte. This volume is the third of four volumes recently made available in English for the United States market. This book, which I have seen often on news stands of Paris in recent years, covers the time from the immediate aftermath of the French victory at Austerlitz up to the moment just before the Grand Armee embarks across the Neiman on the road to Moscow. I read Napoleonic fiction for personal perspective on the historical events. As with most fictional accounts, this work follows from imaginative extrapolations of first hand accounts of events. Professor Gallo offers the highly personal perspective from within the mind of Napoleon himself. The structure of the novel is based on the personal correspondence of Napoleon. In the genre of Napoleonic fiction, Gallo operates on par with Patrick Rimbaud for writing skill. He falls just below Stendhal and Tolstoy as the leaders in historical fiction based on the Age of Napoleon. For the avid follower of the genre, Gallo's work is extremely valuable in at least three respects. First, it is comprehensive. Second, it develops the inner psychological perspective of Napoleon himself. Third, in a completely modern technical style, it imparts a sense of virtual reality from where the reader can see events of fifty years compressed into a single life. An earmark of this volume (as with the other three) is the torrid pace of events comprising the 7 years from Austerlitz to the Neiman. Very noticeably when you first take up the Gallo books you feel rushed. You feel like you are watching a slient movie with characters speeding from one scene to the other. It feels like a 33 rpm record played at 72 rpms, or a video locked in fast forward. The sense of rush will be less if you begin with the first volume of the series called The Song of Departure because it winds up more slowly with a careful development of the childhood of the Napoleon and his early path to power. Regardless, however, of where you begin, before long you will settle into the pace and begin to view events in a natural rhythm from the personal perspective of Napoleon the man. As a caution to the uninitiated, I can't see how anyone uninitiated in the events of Continental Europe between 1789 and 1815 can possibly read, comprehend and enjoy Max Gallo's Napoleon. In this book alone, the momentous battles of Jena, Eylau and Friedland pass in a moment. The same is true of Aspern-Essling and Wagram. Important characters like Calaincourt, Fouche and Talleyrand, along with many others, pass in and out of the story rapidly. In the meantime, our attention is focused on the foreground of Napoleon's t
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