A Model Victory
By (Author) Malcolm Balen
HarperCollins Publishers
HarperPerennial
16th October 2006
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Battles and campaigns
True war and combat stories
History: specific events and topics
Specific battles
Biography: historical, political and military
Land forces and warfare
949.3
Paperback
304
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 18mm
206g
A vivid retelling of the Battle of Waterloo, based on unpublished soldiers written accounts.
There were fifty thousand casualties on the single bloody day of the Battle of Waterloo: killing on the scale of the First World War. In this electrifying account, Malcolm Balen combines extraordinary first-hand accounts of the battle with the story of William Siborne, an officer who wanted to capture the moment of victory by making the perfect model.
Siborne gathered together eyewitness accounts that read as if the battle was fought yesterday. But his quest for truth came up against the might of the British establishment. Who had won the day Was it Wellington's forces or Blucher's Prussians Malcolm Balen tells how two battles of Waterloo were fought for Europe's future, and for the control of history.
Praise for 'A Model Victory': 'Malcolm Balen's lucid take on what might have been a footnote to the historiography of the battle, but in his skilled hands becomes a compelling meditation on the true nature of war, and the vitally important question of who writes the histories of war. Balen's clear-eyed and sympathetic telling of Siborne's sad story, as the model-maker moves from defiance to eventual capitulation to his powerful patrons, is itself a model of historical writing.' Nigel Jones, Literary Review Praise for 'A Very English Deceit': 'As successive corporate accounting scandals surface in America, and global share prices again tumble, Balen reminds us that the murky tale of the first Bubble still stands as a cautionary tale for our time.' Lisa Jardine, Sunday Times 'They are rattling good yarns, and Balen spins them with all the mastery of the seasoned news man that he is.' Peter Jay, Guardian
Malcolm Balen is the author of the biography Kenneth Clarke (1994), A Very English Deceit (2003) and A Model Victory (2005). He is senior editorial adviser to BBC News, where he was previously executive editor.