Waterloo : the aftermath /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:O'Keeffe, Paul, author.
Imprint:London : The Bodley Head, 2014.
Description:392 pages ; 25 cm
Language:English
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/10093369
Hidden Bibliographic Details
ISBN:9781847921826
1847921825
Notes:Includes bibliographical references and index.
Review by New York Times Review

Waterloo was the last full-scale collision of the Napoleonic Wars, but the fighting did not end there, even as Napoleon's defeated army fled headlong from the field. The victorious allies barely paused for breath before they took up the pursuit and hunted down their prey - the Emperor of the French. For his part, Napoleon spent a couple of days nursing the delusion that he could survive the catastrophe. Returning to Paris still spattered with mud and reeking of gun smoke, he called for a national rising to resist the invaders. Fiercely rebutted by his own Parliament, he took poison in a botched attempt at suicide before abdicating and fleeing the capital in the hope of making his way to the United States. It was not to be : Early on the morning of July 15, Napoleon surrendered to the British and embarked for exile. O'Keeffe describes these fraught, uncertain days with skill and a touch for ground-level detail. Incredibly, the first tourists arrived on the battlefield the morning after the fighting, to gape at the piles of corpses and to hear the shrieks of the wounded suffering the agonies of field surgery. After the allies marched into Paris on July 7, Prussian troops bivouacked on the Place du Carrousel outside the Louvre and piled their muskets beneath the windows of the royal apartments in the Tuileries Palace. O'Keeffe has told in vivid colors a story that is often passed over in most narratives, but that is alive with drama and human tragedy.

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [May 10, 2015]
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

British biographer O'Keeffe (Some Sort of Genius) delivers a richly descriptive, moving, and altogether absorbing take on the consequences of Napoleon's final defeat. A large cast of onlookers, soldiers, generals, diplomats, and assorted loved ones populates this distinctive book's pages as O'Keeffe relates how the particular battle struck those who observed, survived, and mopped up after it. He spares readers nothing in his depiction of its sanguinary horrors, which rivaled the American Civil War for modern brutality on the battlefield. The book's most affecting segment concerns Napoleon in defeat; fatalistic, honorable, even noble in flight and captivity, the deposed emperor could not escape the British naval chase and Britain's determination to exile him forever to a lonely outpost far from Europe. Astonishingly, the book contains not a single map, despite the difficulty of attempting to understand either one of modern history's most consequential military battles or its aftermath without seeing how the battle unfolded. That incomprehensible defect aside, O'Keeffe's telling of Napoleon's near escape to the U.S., followed by his attempted flight to Britain itself, is suspenseful and masterful. The book ought to be read in conjunction with those of Jenny Uglow (In These Times) and Brendan Simms (The Longest Afternoon) on related subjects. (May) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The story of the physical aftermath of the Battle of Waterloo, where 200,000 men fought intensely for 10 hours on a bloody battlefield of 5 square miles, leaving more than 40,000 bodies piled in heaps and forcing Napoleon's abdication as emperor of France.O'Keeffe (A Genius for Failure: The Life of Benjamin Robert Haydon, 2009, etc.) draws nicely on letters, memoirs, and other documents to create this vivid account of the immediate days after the historic clash between French, Anglo-allied, and Prussian forces, from the "landscape of carnage" to the occupation of Paris and Napoleon's exile to Saint Helena. Published to coincide with the 200th anniversary of Waterloo (June 18, 1815), the book's grim recounting begins with the congested battlefield, which has been thoroughly documented before: littered with paper (letters, playing cards, prayer books, and much more), the drums of French drummers, and the naked bodies of soldiers stripped completely of their clothing by local peasants and soldiers. Survivors begged to be shot dead. Wheels crushed bodies into "a mass of blood, flesh and clothes." Predators extracted the teeth of dead soldiers (preferably young), to be sold to London dentists, who offered immaculate "Waterloo teeth" to the fashionable and toothless rich. Tourists (including Walter Scott and Lord Byron) gathered swords, belt buckles, and a host of other mementos. The author describes the eagerly awaited news of Napoleon's defeat as it arrived by mail coach in England, the many ensuing celebrations there, and the stripping of the Louvre. Thousands sailed out to see Napoleon on the ship where he was kept before his final exile. Some paid his laundress for the chance to wear his shirts. O'Keeffe offers no revelations for Waterloo buffs, but his book is a highly readable, richly anecdotal retelling of the battle's devastating results. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Review by New York Times Review


Review by Publisher's Weekly Review


Review by Kirkus Book Review