Death or Victory: The Battle for Quebec and the Birth of Empire
By (Author) Dan Snow
HarperCollins Publishers
HarperPress
1st July 2010
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
History of the Americas
971.018
Paperback
560
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 34mm
410g
An epic history of the battle of Quebec, the death of General James Wolfe and the beginnings of Britains empire in North America. Military history at its best.
Perched on top of a tall promontory, surrounded on three sides by the treacherous St Lawrence River, Quebec in 1759 Frances capital city in Canada forms an almost impregnable natural fortress. That year, with the Seven Years War raging around the globe, a force of 49 ships and nearly 9,000 men commanded by the irascible General James Wolfe, navigated the river, scaled the cliffs and laid siege to the town in an audacious attempt to expel the French from North America forever.
In this magisterial first solus book, tying into the 250th anniversary of the battle, Dan Snow tells the story of this famous campaign which was to have far-reaching consequences for Britains rise to global hegemony, and the world at large. Snow brilliantly sets the battle within its global context and tells a gripping tale of brutal war quite unlike any fought in Europe, where terrain, weather and native Canadian tribes were as fearsome as any enemy. I never served so disagreeable a campaign as this, grumbled one British commander, it is war of the worst shape.
1759 was, without question, a year in which the decisions of men changed the world forever. Based on original research and told from all perspectives, this is history military, political, human on an epic scale.
'Many of us wondered whether Dan Snow could make the transition from fluent TV presenter to serious historian. This hugely impressive work confirms his triumphant arrival on the scene. It is by far the best account yet written of a campaign that helped shape North America, and is a fitting tribute on the 250th anniversary of that wonderful year 1759' Richard Holmes
"Dan Snow is perhaps more familiar from television.this, his first book, proves him to be a master military historian in the making. Its grasp of detail is prodigious" Daily Express
"Lively and thoughtfulfascinating stuff.one of the book's strengths is its vivid portrayal of the physical backdrop against which the campaign unfolded" Literary Review
Dan Snow is an historian who has researched, written and presented several documentaries on British and world history for the BBC including Twentieth Century Battlefields, the BAFTA award-winning Battlefield Britain, which he co-presented with his father Peter Snow, and his BBC2 series on the history of the Royal Navy. His writing has appeared in The Times, the Sunday Times, the Guardian, the Daily Express and BBC History Magazine. He is the author of Death or Victory a history of Wolfes siege of Quebec. Educated at the University of Oxford, he has joint British and Canadian citizenship. He lives in London.