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Sharpe's Havoc
 
 

Sharpe's Havoc (Hardcover)

by Bernard Cornwell (Author) "Miss savage was missing ..." (more)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)

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Product Description

From Publishers Weekly

Sharpe fans who may have worried that Cornwell's popular series was drawing to a close can heave a sigh of relief-the 19th entry (after 2002's Sharpe's Prey) brings the up-from-the-ranks rifleman back to the Peninsular War where the series began, among such familiar comrades-in-arms as Sergeant Harper and the "old poacher" Dan Hagman. In the treacherous villain role without which no Sharpe adventure would be complete, the Shakespeare-quoting Colonel Christopher plays both sides of the fence in an effort to contrive a peace between the warring parties that will leave him a rich man. But Christopher hasn't reckoned with the new British commander, Sir Arthur Wellesley, the future Duke of Wellington, who arrives in time to catch Marshal Soult's invading army by surprise. Meanwhile, Sharpe and his men, cut off in a Portuguese village, hold off superior French forces with the aid of Lieutenant Vicente, a Portuguese lawyer, poet and philosopher turned soldier. Sharpe's antilawyer barbs, as well as some later banter about the troubled relations between the English and Irish and between the Spanish and Portuguese, provide comic relief, while Kate Savage, a naive 19-year-old Englishwoman seduced by Christopher, lends relatively minor romantic interest. A delicious scene at Wellesley's headquarters, in which Sharpe has to account for his seemingly inactive role, will please aficionados, as will the ringing words with which Cornwell closes his customary afterword on the historical background: "So Sharpe and Harper will march again."
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

Double trouble: even as he battles Napoleon's forces in Portugal, Sharpe must look for a missing English girl.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Inside This Book (Learn More)
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Miss savage was missing. Read the first page
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Front Cover | Copyright | Excerpt | Back Cover
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9 Reviews
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4.3 out of 5 stars (9 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars The French Cut a Bloody Swath in Portugal While Sharpe Parries a Traitor, Jan 26 2009

Sharpe's Havoc is for long-time fans of Richard Sharpe who want to know about all of his fictional adventures. As usual, looking after the interests of the local British causes Sharpe lots of problems.

If you are reading these books in the order of the chronology of the events rather than the order of their publication, this book follows Sharpe's Rifles where Sharpe rises to command a small band of the 95th Rifles after his superiors are killed in the disastrous retreat from Spain. Sharpe has attached himself to a surveying team that is preparing maps for the British.

As the French prepare to capture Oporto under Marshal Soult, Sharpe is ordered to help locate a missing woman who may have gone to her family's country home. No sooner does he receive this order than it is countermanded by the shadowy Colonel Christopher who orders a retreat in the opposite directions. After receiving his orders in writing, Sharpe begins to retreat . . . only to find it's too late. There is no safe way out of the city. So he takes his men and they take their chances.

The scenes involving Portuguese people leaving Oporto are pretty gruesome. You won't soon forget them.

Eventually, Sharpe and his men (alone with some Portuguese allies) find themselves where the missing woman may be found. Once there, Colonel Christopher begins playing dangerous games at the expense of the British and Sharpe. He also misleads the woman into believing she is married (even though Christopher is already married). The consequences are fatal for many of those who rely on Christopher.

At the book's end, Sharpe and his men play a key role in the recapture of Oporto by Sir Arthur Wellesley (Sharpe's not-so-friendly friend in high places).

There are three battle scenes that you'll enjoy in the book. The various machinations of Christopher and Sharpe being caught in stasis don't provide for much interesting reading. As a result, the middle of the book (between the first and second battle scenes) may not appeal to you.

If you don't like to read about gruesome mistreatment of innocents, this book won't be for you. It's pretty explicit.

If you are a Francophile, don't read this book. The French army comes in for some pretty strong condemnation for its ways of "living off the land and the local people."
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5.0 out of 5 stars Sharpe in Portugal, Mar 12 2004
By Frank J. Konopka (Shamokin, PA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
It's always a cause for rejoicing to me when I have the chance to read a new novel about Richard Sharpe and his exploits in the Napoleonic era. These books are excellent reading, and you also receive a "ground-pounder's" view of the wars of that time. This isn't the elite "from the command post" view, but from the guys who actually did the fighting, up close and really dirty. The writing is first-rate, and the characters quite well drawn. The plots keep the reader moving swiftly, and the pages are turned with great anticipation. Just when it appears that the author may have exhausted the scenarios of the war years in his books, he gives all of his faithful readers hope for the future when he says at the end: "Sharpe and Harper will march again". That is fantastic news!
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3.0 out of 5 stars Richard...We know ye too well..., May 11 2003
By "okie580" (bergen county, nj) - See all my reviews
The Sharpe series is 19 books long now, I think. Cornwell wrote several books in the original series and now goes back on occasion and adds episodes. It's a difficult task to write new chapters into a book already written. The chronology may suffer or the hero's past might not be acknowledged in his future. These problems don't bother me so much. This book, however, was a disappointment and I'm not sure why. Everything one would expect in a book by Cornwell is here: a remorseless villain, a damsel in distress, small skirmishes and a major battle. Maybe it's the fact we've travelled these roads so many times already and there's nothing new down there anyway. There can be no doubt of the outcome; we've already seen the far future of Sharpe.
Patrick O'Brien suffered this same sort of malaise in his Aubrey/Maturin series too. Maybe authors get bored with their own creations and cannot think of ways to inject new excitement and experiences in these set pieces. Perhaps Richard Sharpe needs a vacation in Bermuda or someplace. I can see the pirates and the women of easy virtue now...
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Most recent customer reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars Sharpe fans will be delighted with this very good read
The surprising thing about SHARPE'S HAVOC has nothing to do with its content. The content of the Richard Sharpe books --- this is the nineteenth --- is generally the same. Read more
Published on May 3 2003 by Bookreporter.com

3.0 out of 5 stars NOT SO SHARP
Sharpe's Havoc is the eighteenth volume of Richard Sharpe's saga, but its time frame is early in Britain's Peninsular War against Napoleon, filling the gap between Sharpe's Rifles... Read more
Published on April 30 2003 by charles falk

5.0 out of 5 stars Back to where it belongs...
First things first: As Action&Adventure Novels Sharpe's are the best, get it and enjoy, nobody does it better. Read more
Published on April 26 2003 by Alejo

5.0 out of 5 stars Sharpe as ever!
For long-time fans like me who found "Sharpe's Prey" a bit below par, I'm pleased to say that this one returns to first principles, ... Read more
Published on April 17 2003 by Suetonius

5.0 out of 5 stars Tremendous military historical
In 1809 in the Iberian Peninsular, though isolated from his side's main forces, Richard Sharpe and his unit defend Oporto, Portugal from Napoleon's armies. Read more
Published on April 11 2003 by Harriet Klausner

5.0 out of 5 stars Another winner from Cornwell!
On a time line with other Richard Sharpe books , this one would fall between Sharpe's Rifles and Sharpe's Eagle : May 1805. Read more
Published on April 9 2003 by Rodger Raubach

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