A Brief History of Napoleon in Russia
By (Author) Alan Palmer
Little, Brown Book Group
Robinson Publishing
12th September 2003
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Battles and campaigns
Land forces and warfare
Specific wars and campaigns
Early modern warfare (including gunpowder warfare)
940.27092
Paperback
288
Width 127mm, Height 203mm, Spine 19mm
367g
By 1812, when Napoleon invaded Russia, his empire covered most of Europe. The invasion was to be its crowning glory. Instead it ended in disaster, defeat and humiliation and marked the beginning of his decline. In this narrative, the French campaign is followed day to day within the most intimate context of the Emperor's state of mind, bad health and indecision. As the invasion heads towards its climax among the flames of Moscow, the great disaster that ensued can clearly be seen as the product of Napoleon's innumerable mistakes and omissions. The greatest military leader of modern times lost his army of some half a million men and 150,000 horses not by folly but by default; the Russians saved their country more by accident than by strategy.
A fine piece of narrative history, a combination of suspense and scholarship ... I was inspired by Palmer to re-read War and Peace. - Antonia Fraser, Sunday Times
Palmer has done justice to these epic events with a lively, vivid narrative, written with the appropriate style and panache. - Lawrence James, The TimesAlan Palmer is an author and historian. His many critically acclaimed works include Alexander I: Tsar of War and Peace, Metternich, Councillor of Europe and The Decline and Fall of the Ottoman Empire. Among Alan Palmer's books are Napoleon in Russia, Metternich, Alexander I and Twilight of the Habsburgs.