The Age of Napoleon
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- $12.99
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- $12.99
Publisher Description
The age of Napoleon transformed Europe, laying the foundations for the modern world. Now Alistair Horne, one of the great chroniclers of French history gives us a fresh account of that remarkable time.
Born into poverty on the remote island of Corsica, he rose to prominence in the turbulent years following the French Revolution, when most of Europe was arrayed against France. Through a string of brilliant and improbable victories (gained as much through his remarkable ability to inspire his troops as through his military genius), Napoleon brought about a triumphant peace that made him the idol of France and, later, its absolute ruler.
Heir to the Revolution, Napoleon himself was not a revolutionary; rather he was a reformer and a modernizer, both liberator and autocrat. Looking to the Napoleonic wars that raged on the one hand, and to the new social order emerging on the other, Horne incisively guides readers through every aspect of Napoleon’s two-decade rule: from France’s newfound commitment to an aristocracy based on merit rather than inheritance, to its civil code (Napoleon’s most important and enduring legacy), to censorship, cuisine, the texture of daily life in Paris, and the influence of Napoleon abroad. At the center of Horne’s story is a singular man, one whose ambition, willpower, energy and ability to command changed history, and continues to fascinate us today.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Two centuries on, Napoleon remains very much a part of European political discourse, as French foreign minister Dominique de Villepin's recent 600-page canonization of the Corsican-born leader made clear. From the pen of the popular historian Horne (Seven Ages of Paris; The Price of Glory: Verdun, 1916) comes a slim and sexy addition to the 600,000 works on Napoleon Horne says are in existence. Here the author focuses on the nonmilitary and domestic dimensions of Napoleon's life and times: particularly his character, his private life, his beautification of Paris, the style empire and the see-through gossamer blouses of the ladies of the naughty 1790s. Horne's taste for the titillating will be shared by some readers: in Egypt, Napoleon "was solaced by a lady called La Bellilote, who concealed a well-rounded pair of buttocks in tight officer breaches," in Paris by the full-breasted 15-year-old Mademoiselle George. Horne draws extensively on the pages of Lanzac de Laborie's massive and largely unread early 20th-century account of Napoleonic Paris, which furnishes him with a treasure-trove of local color. Unfortunately, there are several signs of haste: whatever his achievements, Napoleon was not born in the 15th-century reign of Louis XI, and the first years of the 19th century were not a "new millennium"; the book's sexiness, above all, comes at the expense of real weight. Its cultural points of reference (the constant comparisons to the Nazi and Soviet regimes) are dated, and one might wish for a work more seriously engaged with its subject's importance for the universalizing ideologies of the present. As picturesque social history, however, this addition to the Chronicles series is fleet-footed and fast-moving.