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Sharpe's Sword (Sharpe)

Sharpe's Sword (Sharpe)

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Author: Bernard Cornwell
Publisher: Penguin (Non-Classics)
Category: Book

List Price: $12.00
Buy Used: $0.01
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New (11) Used (30) from $0.01

Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 15 reviews
Sales Rank: 1327261

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 384
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.5
Dimensions (in): 7.7 x 5.1 x 0.6

ISBN: 0140243046
EAN: 9780140243048
ASIN: 0140243046

Publication Date: August 4, 1987
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Audio Cassette - Sharpe's Sword (Richard Sharpe's Adventure Series #14)
  • Audio Download - Sharpe's Sword (Unabridged)
  • Paperback - Sharpe's Sword
  • Paperback - Sharpe's Sword: Richard Sharpe and the Salamanca Campaign, June and July 1812 (Sharpe)
  • Paperback - Sharpe's Sword: Richard Sharpe and the Salamanca Campaign, June and July 1812 (Sharpe)
  • Paperback - Sharpe's Sword (Richard Sharpe's Adventure Series #5)
  • Mass Market Paperback - Sharpe's Sword (Richard Sharpe's Adventure Series #14)
  • Hardcover - Sharpe's Sword (Series #14)
  • Audio Cassette - Sharpe's Sword
  • Audio Cassette - Sharpe's Sword (Sharpe's Adventures)
  • Paperback - Sharpe's Sword: Richard Sharpe and the Salamanca Campaign, June and July 1812
  • Audio Cassette - Sharpe's Sword (Richard Sharpe's Adventure Series #14)
  • Library Binding - Sharpe's Sword: Richard Sharpe and the Salamanca Campaign June and July, 1812
  • Hardcover - Sharpe's Sword
  • Paperback - Sharpe's Sword (Richard Sharpe's Adventure Series #14)
  • Audio Download - Sharpe's Sword: Book XIV of the Sharpe Series (Unabridged)
  • Audio Download - Sharpe's Sword: Book XIV of the Sharpe Series
  • Kindle Edition - Sharpe's Sword: Richard Sharpe and the Salamance Campaign, June and July 1812
  • Hardcover - Sharpe's Sword

Similar Items:

  • Sharpe's Company (Richard Sharpe's Adventure Series #13)
  • Sharpe's Enemy (Richard Sharpe's Adventure Series #6)
  • Sharpe's Honour (Richard Sharpe's Adventures, No. 17)
  • Sharpe's Regiment (Richard Sharpe's Adventure Series)
  • Sharpe's Battle (Richard Sharpe's Adventure Series #12)

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
France's most ruthless assassin failed to kill Captain Richard Sharpe on the first try. He will never get a second. Sharpe follows Leroux across the battlefield, determined to exact his revenge with the cold steel of his sword. "The best series character of the '80s".--Stephen King.


Customer Reviews:   Read 10 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars With the war at a crossroads, Sharpe and an assassin cross swords   September 8, 2008
Having been boxed up in Portugal for several years, only now are the British trying to get some real traction against the French, thrusting into Spain. And they're losing. Marshal Marmont, commander of just one of five huge armies Napoleon has put in Spain, is pushing Wellington back. The English take Salamanca, but only because Marmont pulls out tactically, seeking a better place for the battle he knows will destroy the English. Marmont threatens to retake the city, but the major battle never materializes. Wellington chases him east, but then his army must retreat to avoid being cut off from its Portuguese redoubt by the French.

Sharpe fights both the large war and a smaller, more private one. French assassin Colonel Leroux kills ruthlessly, hideously and often as he tries to break up an English spy ring and save his own hide. Caught by the British but escaping, he kills Sharpe's commanding and junior officers. Sharpe vows to catch him. Sharpe's pal, the intelligence chief Major Hogan, and Wellington both need him caught. Meanwhile they worry about intelligence leaks; the French have a spy too close to the high command.

Sharpe and every other British officer swoons when meeting the dazzling Marquesa who dominates Salamanca society, and we all know which officer the Marquesa will take a shine to, despite his poverty and lack of polish. And when Sharpe and Leroux cross swords, as they do, and do again, we know what kind of sparks will fly.



5 out of 5 stars Magnificent episode in the Sharpe saga   April 5, 2007
Bernard Cornwell's Richard Sharpe series is one of the most beloved collective works in the sub-genre of historical fiction. Spanning over twenty novels (and counting!), Cornwell has treated his readers with thrilling battlefield and bedroom exploits from Flanders to India to Spain and France. While the novels have a definitive formula, they never grow stale.

"Sharpe's Sword" is among the best of the Sharpe novels. Sharpe is a captain of the 95th Rifles, attached to the South Essex regiment as a light company. As fans of the series know, Sharpe has made himself indispensable to the British army (including his patron, Lord Wellington) by being the most lethal rogue in an army full of cut-throats and vagabonds. But in "Sharpe's Sword," Cornwell has created a foe worthy of Sharpe - the French spy-hunter Leroux, a lethal aristocrat whose charge from Napoleon is to topple the British spy network.

Leroux is captured by Sharpe early in the novel, but takes advantage of a foolish British officer's notion of "parole" (in which a captured officer may keep his weapons and freedom if he gives his sworn statement that he will not try to escape). Acting quickly, Leroux murders his way back to freedom, but in doing so he earns Sharpe's undying hatred . . . and envy. Sharpe hates him for being a backstabbing liar, but Sharpe envies him because Leroux has the most magnificent sword Sharpe has ever seen, and Sharpe wants it.

And so Sharpe and Leroux are caught in a duel to the death while the French and British armies slug it out in the gorgeous city of Salamanca and also on the plains of Spain. "Sharpe's Sword" has it all - humor, romance, intrigue, friendship, betrayal, and battles. And what battles! Nobody writes a better battle scene than Bernard Cornwell, and he tops himself when describing a suicidal, insane cavalry charge by Wellington's German heavy cavalry against formed French squares. The reader is flung into the wild madness that is Napoleonic warfare, and it is a glorious madness indeed.

Well-researched and lovingly written, "Sharpe's Sword" exemplifies all that is good in the Sharpe series.



5 out of 5 stars A Great Series   August 15, 2006
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

This is another entry on the Sharpe series. It is fun, entertaining and very readable. Cornwell's research is as excellent as usual. He takes some licenses for the shake of the story and continuity, but this is OK. Some people are outraged by the portrait of some of the real historical characters, but historical characters are rarely depicted accurately in historical fiction, so I think this can be forgiven. Besides, usually a more serious account of these characters is given at the end of the book on the Historical Note.

Many people insist in compare this series with Patrick O'Brian's Master and Commander. I don't think this is fair for any of the series, they are different entities. What they have in common is that once you start you may get hooked and devour one book after another...

And in the literary world today that is a rare and marvelous thing.



5 out of 5 stars My favorite so far....   June 15, 2006
A friend referred to the Sharpe series as literary opium...he may be right. They are guilty pleasures, for sure....and I worry what will happen when I have read them all.

The thing is, drug or not, Cornwell is a wonderful writer. I laughed out loud a couple of times, was riveted by a love scene, and ran to the computer to look up the actual battle and scenes described. Great stuff.

And then I had the misfortune to read the new McMurtry novel....



3 out of 5 stars Not bad but not my fave Sharpe novel   April 1, 2006
"Sharpe's Sword" is a decent entry into the Sharpe series, but I happen to tend to prefer the Sharpe adventures that are primarily military rather than the ones with espionage plots. And, for my taste, "Sharpe's Sword" is a bit heavy on the spy angle and a hair light on the battles. But the book's action scenes, while failing to rival those in, say, "Sharpe's Rifles," "Sharpe's Eagle" or "Sharpe's Company," are still pretty satisfying. "Sharpe's Sword" is far from the weakest of the generally very strong Sharpe series (of the ones that I've read so far, I'd say that "Sharpe's Prey" my least favorite), but it doesn't quite rank among the very best, either.

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