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Sharpe's Escape

Sharpe's Escape

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Manufacturer: HarperCollins e-books
Category: EBooks

List Price: $7.99
Buy New: $6.39
You Save: $1.60 (20%)



Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 23 reviews
Sales Rank: 19606

Format: Kindle Book
Media: Kindle Edition
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 368

Dewey Decimal Number: 823.914
ASIN: B000FC1PSE

Publication Date: May 4, 2004
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Similar Items:

  • Sharpe's Battle
  • Sharpe's Gold: Richard Sharpe and the Destruction of Almedia, August 1810
  • Sharpe's Company: The Seige of Badajoz
  • Sharpe's Havoc
  • Sharpe's Eagle: Richard Sharpe and the Talavera Campaign, July 1809

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
It is 1810, and in Napoleon's determination to conquer Portugal -- and push the British back to the sea -- he sends his largest army yet across the Spanish frontier. But between the Portuguese border and Napoleon's seemingly certain victory are twoobstacles -- a wasted land, stripped of food by Wellington's orders, and Captain Richard Sharpe.

But Sharpe is in trouble. The captain of the Light Company is threatened from inside and out: First by an incompetent British officer, who by virtue of family connections is temporarily given Sharpe's command. An even greater danger is posed by two corrupt Portuguese brothers -- Major Ferreira, a high-ranking officer in the army of Portugal, and his brother, nicknamed "Ferragus" (after a legendary Portuguese giant), who makes no claims to respectability, preferring instead to rule by crude physical strength and pure intimidation. Together the brothers have developed a devious plot to ingratiate themselves with the French invaders who are threatening to become Portugal's new rulers.

Sharpe's interference in the first stage of their plan earns the undying enmity of the brothers. Ferragus vows revenge and plots a merciless trap that seems certain to kill Sharpe and his intimates -- battle-tested ally Sergeant Harper, the Portuguese officer Jorge Vicente, and a prickly but lovely English governess. As the city of Coimbra is burned and pillaged, Sharpe and his companions plot a daring escape, ensuring that Ferragus will follow on toward Lisbon, into the jaws of a snare laid by Wellington -- the massive lines of Torres Vedras, a daring and ingenious last stand against the invaders. There, beneath the British guns, Sharpe is reunited with his shattered but grateful company, and meets his enemies in a thrilling and decisive fight.

Sharpe's Escape emphatically reaffirms Bernard Cornwell's status as "perhaps the greatest writer of historical adventure novels today" (Washington Post); its climactic battle scenes and evocative recreation of history sweep the reader off the page and into the action and drama of nineteenth-century warfare.




Customer Reviews:   Read 18 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Another Good One   September 1, 2008
This is a worthy addition to the Sharpe canon. Ripping battle scenes, a nasty villain, and interesting plot complications. My only quibble(and it probably only bugs me) is that I wish the Adverb Police would visit Mr. Cornwell. He has a character say something"briskly" not once, not twice, but three times, all within the space of 2 pages. Surely the proof reader should catch that. But that is really a minor annoyance in a very enjoyable read.


5 out of 5 stars Another great sharpe book   May 3, 2008
Great read, engrossing and thrilling. You will always be wanting to pick up the next one.


5 out of 5 stars Great read!   April 27, 2008
I thoroughly enjoyed this book. The action was great and it just was a book that was difficult to put down. I would recommend this book to anyone who enjoys military history.


5 out of 5 stars An enjoyable Sharpe novel with great battle detail   April 22, 2008
With Napoleon facing no other opposition in Europe and having put 300,000 French troops in Iberia, the Brits and the Portuguese are beleaguered and falling back. Marshal Massena pushes forward, planning to take Lisbon soon. He needs to: Wellington has scorched the Portuguese earth and the invaders are hungry.

Massena meets unexpectedly stiff resistance at the ridge of Bussaco before his soldiers plunder Coimbra and his army turns south.

There, in an amazing feat of both engineering and secrecy, Wellington has managed to construct a 50-mile long fortification from the River Tagus to the Atlantic. He has altered rivers, flooded lowlands, moved entire hillsides to create unscalable cliffs, built hundreds of forts and filled valleys with thornbushes, creating a major killing field.

Sharpe fears for his career when Colonel Lawford "temporarily" places his pompous brother-in-law in charge of Sharpe's rifle company at Bussaco. And Sharpe runs afoul of Ferreira, Portuguese intelligence officer, and the latter's rogue brother Ferragus, whom Sharpe realizes secretly conspire to feed the French and secure a place under their regime.

Captured while searching for the food caches, Sharpe and Harper, along with loyal Portuguese officer Vincente and Ferreira's English governess Sarah Fry, must make a harrowing escape, first from their cellar prison and then across the French-controlled countryside. Sharpe, needless to say, still wants to catch the brothers and get even. An enjoyable installment in the series. The battle detail, particularly at Bussaco, is very good.



4 out of 5 stars Another good Sharpe   April 22, 2008
Another classic Sharpe. Like other Sharpe books, this one is a very easy-reading and entertaining book.

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