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28 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Solid Blow by Blow Account, February 13, 2006
This review is from: The Battle: A New History of Waterloo (Hardcover)
I bought this book after reading a reviewer's account of the book that coined it as "reads like a novel". Well, it does not read as a novel to me. However, that slight criticism does not prevent it from being an excellent book.
I am by not means a historic scholar on Napoleon or the Napoleonic Wars. I am rather an interested "lay person" on the subject who has read several books on the subject. That said, I found the book very interesting in terms of understanding the battle as well as the manner of tatics and fighting of the era. Barbero gives a good bit of CONCISE background on tatics and a few other items to help familiarize the novice with such subject matter to help understand the actual actions taken by the armies. This for me alone was worth the price of the book.
As I mentioned, it is not a novel type read, but it is a great overview of the battle as well as informative on the individual actions of the battle and reads as such. Think of it more as setting the board and then giving the play-by-play of the actions taken.
The chapters are short and allow for easy breaks in reading when you don't have a bulk of time for setting aside of reading. One can pick it up at lunch or in a break and read easily and arrive at convenient and natural break area. Some chapters are as few as three pages long while others at a bit longer. But again, Barbero sets each action (and background) as move by move chess match along with personal accounts from some of those involved.
My only real criticism is the maps. I had a bit of trouble following the armies involved and their movements. The maps in the front are helpful at the start but lose their helpfulness once the battle begins. Thankfully I had a book on my shelf that had maps that helped me follow the action more closely with better references. For example, the sunken road is mentioned often, but never even shows up on the maps. A more detailed series of maps would have been helpful to compliment Barbero's play-by-play action.
Overall this critcism is minor at best. If you are looking for a book to give you the detailed actions of the battle as well as some good concise background on Napoleonic Warfare, then you have found a book to your liking.
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26 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Masterpiece, August 18, 2006
This review is from: The Battle: A New History of Waterloo (Hardcover)
This is an superb book that totally engages the reader and that not only provides a feel for what it was like to be on the field of battle, but also provides well researched counterpoints to previously accepted history. For example:
The attack(s)on Hougomount were not a wasted effort for although there were no more than two thousand men in the chateau , the total number of Allied foreces committed to this action was much higher.
Mouton did not in fact receive orders from Napoleon to cover the French right wing from the Prussians (as Napoleon maintains in his memoirs). Mouton's troops 'mission was to support the attack of d'Erlon's I Corps, and they were taken completely by surprise when the Prussians appeared on their flank.'
The great French cavalry charges could not have occurred without Napoleons explicit orders as the preparation was taking place only a few hundred yards from him.
The French cavalry was not a spent force after the great charges but remained an effective threat and gave effective support for the remainder of the battle.
The final attack by elements of the Guard was not carried out in sufficient numbers, but what in fact Napoleon was relying on was the psychological effect of the advance over his adversaries.
The French retreat was perhaps conducted more orderly than has been previously portrayed as no French Eagle was captured during the retreat despite the pursuing Prussians.
The book is almost written in the style of a novel and eloquently interweaves first hand accounts throughout but the author is still able to provide the grand strategy and new insights into the battle to keep the scholars happy. The author brilliantly covers the brutality, savagery and uncertainity of battle, that one feels as though they were present. The author also gives coverage to the aftermath of the battle, to the dying and wounded on the field and the unrelentless and revenge driven pursuit of the Prussians.
This has to be one of the best books on the Battle of Waterloo and gives all the partcipants impartial coverage. In fact, this is one of the strong aspects of this book. I became totally engrossed in this book and found it both enthralling and illuninating. Highly recommended reading!
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19 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Waterloo from an objective point of view, February 28, 2006
This review is from: The Battle: A New History of Waterloo (Hardcover)
Finally, a study of the famous battle which takes to accout EACH AND EVERY side to the battle: British, French, Prussian, Belgian, Dutch, and the minor German states.
For Barbero, Waterloo wasn't won just because of the British units. While the Dutch and Belgians, being mostly either militia units or former members of the French army, while some of their units did give ground, some stood up and fought the advancing French to the utmost (especially the professional units which were formerly a part of the French army). The Prussians did everything they could to fulfill their General's promise of coming to the aid of their allies. Barbero even did not forget the desperate struggle of the minor German state units like the Hanoverians and the Brandenburgers in the left wing of the allied army, a place of the battle mostly being left out in other accounts of Waterloo. He shows how close... very close... the French came to breaking the allied line. "A near run thing" indeed. And takes a look at the poignant aftermath as soldiers absorb the horror of the days after. The number of dead in that single piece of land wasn't surpassed until the American Civil War. Europeans never involved themselves in a war of that scale for 100 years until 1914 when an even greater horror was unleashed.
He argues against the reasons French apologists give as to why Napoleon made so many bad decisions. He give a great detailed account on the fight in famous places like Hougoumont and La Haye Saint and emphasizes the importance of each site. He especially gives tribute to the bravery of the defenders of these places particularly the Coldstream Guards and the King's German Legion.
Clear, entertaining, detailed down to each particular unit's actions, he approaches the event not in the traditional method of dividing the battle into 4 phases, but presents the sequence of events by the hour as they simultaneously happen so the reader has a clear perception of what is happening in the whole field at a certain time. From the assault at Hougoumont to the attack by d'Erlon's Corps in the Allied center and the left, to the gradual arrival of the Prussian Corps and their attack on Placenoit, to the charge of the French cavalry (which wasn't an all-out charge as is usually mistaken, but a methodical advance of horse battalions through the allied line which was broken up in squares, to the final assault of the Middle Guard (not the Old Guard as is always mistaken) and the subsequent retreat and rear guard action of the Old Guard.
To me this is the best account of the battle. It doesn't hurt either that it is written in an entertaining and clear style. It shows glory, excitement, courage, steadfastness, in battle as well as fear, terror and horror. A must for military buffs.
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