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Imperial Sunset

by Rindis on August 5, 2023 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

R.F. Delderfield is mostly known for fiction, but this book shows he was quite good at popular non-history as well (his fiction was mostly historical, so the two do go together).

In this case, he’s looking at Napoleon from after the retreat from Russia to his first abdication. He starts (very effectively) with the experience of Hamburg in this period. As exaggerated reports of the vast Russian army swarming into Germany sweep Europe, disaffected areas enter a period of instability. Not fans of the Continental System, the leading citizens wanted out, and the local Cossack commander seemed to offer just that. But the number of actual Cossacks in the area was small, the cities of the Baltic coast weren’t really willing to put up with the pillaging and requisitions needed to support them, and a brief moment of independence ends with Davout garrisoning Hamburg after about a month and a half.

Much of Europe went through the same emotional journey as Napoleon seemed entirely beaten at the end of 1812, but it would be another two years of desperate fighting before the true dissolution of Napoleon’s empire would happen.

Overall, on this subject, I would recommend Lieven’s Russia Against Napoleon, but it’s not a replacement for this book. Imperial Sunset is a bit more focused, and more looks at the French side of what was happening, whereas Lieven’s book naturally focuses on the Coalition side, and mostly Russia, so the two complement each other too. I’d give this book a slight edge in prose, though Delderfield doesn’t do as good a job with helping you mentally juggle where everybody is, and where they’re going. Either book is a good popular history that cover two years that often get left out of the Napoleonic myth.

└ Tags: books, history, reading, review
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God of Fire

by Rindis on July 28, 2023 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

It took six years for the final volume of this trilogy to come out, and given the page count takes another two-hundred page jump upwards, I imagine it was in the category of ‘the book that ate his life’.

The longer page count is put to good use as the plot continues to evolve and become more complicated now. We have three well-formed major plot lines: Clay and Doto continue their quest to figure out what has gone wrong with the world, and how to contain Ogya. Laughing Dog falls further under the sway of Ogya while convinced he’s still in control and fights the forest that recently has become so especially deadly. And Cloud is dealing with having stepped into a leadership role she had refused so long as she guides the exiles of the People of the Savanna away from the forest and Ogya.

Clay and Doto remain isolated from the rest of the plot for much of this book, while the last two plot lines continue to resonate with each other, and Cloud’s journey throws off more sub-plots and a new major viewpoint character. The major character growth is here too; Clay and Doto have worked through their major issues (though by no means all of them) by now, so the engine of character development is largely left to Cloud and Mirage, and much of the action is dominated by the journey of the exiles. And it is very well handled.

Needless to say, Campbell has stuck the landing, and even though the series began quite well, it finishes better than it started. It’s much more complicated than the series began, which probably accounts for the time as well as the length.

└ Tags: books, fantasy, furry, reading, review
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The Age of Elegance

by Rindis on July 20, 2023 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

Bryant’s third book of the Napoleonic era starts with Wellington in the Peninsula in front of Badajoz, while Napoleon faces the Sixth Coalition in Germany. This is very much English-centric history, so the focus is entirely on the Spanish front.

The first four chapters give a good account of Wellington’s advance over the Pyrenees, and the campaign in the south of France. This, along with what happened in Germany and the road to Paris in 1813-14, does not get enough attention, and so makes interesting reading right there.

Unsurprisingly, he doesn’t stop there, but talks about the peace process after Napoleon’s abdication, and the Hundred Days, concluding with the Battle of Waterloo.

Surprisingly, he doesn’t stop there either. The second half of the book is a social history of England over the next several years, as British and world economy struggle with the transition to peace. Wartime expenditures come to a sudden halt, causing dislocation in industry. But free access to European markets is restored, which helps, but the world economy stutters trying to absorb the scale of production now flooding out of the British Isles. Bryant mostly looks at the lower-level impacts of this in protests and economic hardship, and outright rebellion.

This has been another good transition from print to electronic format by Endeavour Press. The focus, as ever, is very English-centric, but it is well-written, and very enjoyable. Don’t let this be your primary source of knowledge on the era, but it does talk of things that you won’t encounter a lot of other overviews too.

└ Tags: books, history, reading, review
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1809: Thunder on the Danube – Part 3

by Rindis on July 12, 2023 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

Gill’s third book has Wagram and Znaim as the subtitle, and these battles are indeed important to the volume. However, we finally get a proper recounting of events elsewhere (other than Italy, which was covered previously, though the sequel to the campaign is in here). Napoleon and the Hapsburgs were both concerned with events elsewhere, and Gill brings them in to show how things went, and how they influenced strategic thinking. Neither were very concerned with Spain (which, unlike everything else, was not adjacent to the Danube front), so naturally, that doesn’t get explored, but outside of that, this turns into a thorough look at the 1809 campaigning season.

He starts with an account of the campaigning in Poland, moves into Hungary, where Eugene’s victorious army moved into after chasing Johann out of Italy, and then ties in all the smaller forces in the south, scattered from the north Italian border to Dalmatia. This takes about half the text. After talking about the pause on the Danube while Napoleon put everything together for a surprise second crossing (which really shouldn’t have been a big surprise) we go to the centerpiece of the book: Wagram.

Znaim is a battle that started, but was called off on account of a ceasefire that paved the way to the eventual peace. Gill has done another book really detailing the situation, but it certainly gets good coverage here.

And over one third of the book is a set of detailed orders of battle for everyone.

As expected, the three books are an excellent set, and while I quibble over some of the order of presentation, they’re excellently written and put together, and recommended for anyone who has an interest in one of Napoleon’s more important campaigns.

└ Tags: books, history, reading, review
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Forest Gods

by Rindis on July 4, 2023 at 12:00 pm
Posted In: Books

The second volume of the Fire Bearers trilogy expands the world, and the scope of the plot, with the book jumping up a hundred pages in length to compensate.

The first volume left off in a bit of a quiet moment, but there’s plenty happening out in the world. Doto and Clay’s relationship isn’t settled, but it is established, and this book goes into the process of it turning into a more long-term relationship. At the same time, Clay’s brother, Laughing Dog has returned to the People of the Savanna, who are dealing with the nearby forest suddenly attacking anyone who goes in it. (Yes, the trees and other plants themselves attacking.)

This one took me a bit long to get through. The medicine woman of the tribe, Cloud, becomes one of the viewpoint characters, and there’s a section in the middle where you and she see things going wrong, and can’t do anything about it. It’s much like the middle of A Fire Upon the Deep, important, but not at all fun to read.

Past that problem, it is an excellent middle volume. The problems back home pile up as, unknowing of Ogya’s involvement, Clay pushes Doto out of the forest into the wider world, as they go on a hunt for Sarmu, god of the savanna. Coming home, as always, is rougher than expected, and our two plot lines intersect, merge, and then push off in their own directions again for the climax of the book.

The biggest problem here was that this and God of Clay would sit on my shelf for about a decade, waiting for the third book to come out. Which thankfully it has.

└ Tags: books, fantasy, furry, reading, review
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