Showing posts with label Bernard Cornwell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bernard Cornwell. Show all posts

Friday, February 18, 2022

The Devil's Own Luck: My Washington Times On Crime Column On 'Sharpe's Assassin: Richard Sharpe and the Occupation of Paris, 1815'

The Washington Times published my On Crime column on Sharpe’s Assassin today.

Like the many other Sharpe fans, I was pleased to see that Bernard Cornwell has once again brought the Napoleonic era British soldier back to life in his latest historical novel, “Sharpe’s Assassin: Richard Sharpe and the Occupation of Paris, 1815.”

Last seen in 2006’s “Sharpe’s Fury,” the former London street urchin turned soldier - a rogue on our side, as Mr. Cornwell has described him -, has risen up from the ranks to become a lieutenant colonel under the Duke of Wellington. In “Sharpe’s Assassin,” Wellington has defeated Napoleon at Waterloo and the British and their allies are occupying Paris. Sharpe, who is told he has the Devil’s own luck, is assigned to rescue a British spy and engage a group of Frenchmen who seek to assassinate Wellington. The leader of the Frenchmen is Colonel Lanier, a capable and fierce officer known as ‘le Monstre.” 

I reached out to Bernard Cornwell and asked him why he has returned to writing about Richard Sharpe.

“I think it was nostalgia!  I’ve always been very fond of Sharpe and even though I had finished the series and seen him safely through Waterloo he never left my thoughts,” Bernard Cornwell replied. “I used to say I’d return to him when I retired, so maybe that’s what I’ve done? I’m certainly old enough!  But really, I long wanted to pick his story up again and last year, having finished the Saxon tales of “The Last Kingdom,” seemed an ideal time.”

How would you describe the novel?

“The way I describe all my novels - an adventure story! But one based on real events. History does provide a dramatic setting for a novelist and the occupation of a defeated enemy’s capital city is plainly dramatic and dangerous, but the adventure story is, of course, fictional.”

How would you describe Richard Sharpe? 

“Grumpy! He’s not unusual in being an officer who has been promoted from the ranks; by 1815 some 15% of British officers had come from the ranks, but he is unusual in being a very talented soldier and a very effective fighter,” Mr. Cornwell explained. “A formidable man who has never quite lost the resentment of being an outsider - not born to the officer class - and who constantly believes he has something to prove. It’s as if he had been picked #199 in the NFL draft and knows he’s better than that.”

You can read the rest of the column via the below link:

https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2022/feb/17/book-review-sharpes-assassin-richard-sharpe-and-th/  

You can also read my earlier interview with Bernard Cornwell via the below link:

Paul Davis On Crime: My Crime Beat Column: My Q & A With Sharpe Creator Bernard Cornwell


Tuesday, February 25, 2020

My Washington Times Review Of Bernard Cornwell's 'Sword Of Kings'


The Washington Times published my review of Bernard Cornwell’s Sword of Kings.

I first became acquainted with Bernard Cornwell by watching the “Sharpe” TV series, which was based on his historical novels that featured Richard Sharpe, portrayed by actor Sean Bean, a Napoleonic-era British soldier up from the ranks. Bernard Cornwell described Richard Sharpe as a rogue, but a rogue on our side.

I read the entire Sharpe series and I went on to read his other historical fiction, including his Saxon stories. The Saxon stories cover the bloody path that led to the creation of England in the 9th and 10th centuries.

The hero of the Saxon stories is Uhtred of Bebbanburg, a Saxon lord from Northumbria who was captured by the Danes as a young man and adopted into their tribe. He later fights for Alfred the Great, the King of Wessex.

Alfred the Great’s dream was to unite the Anglo-Saxon kingdoms into one kingdom called England. Mr. Cornwell’s Saxon stories were adapted for television and called “The Last Kingdom,” with actor Alexander Dreymon as Uhtred. The series appears on Netflix.

In Mr. Cornwell’s “King of Swords,” the 12th installment in the Saxon stories, Uhtred, who narrates the stories, becomes involved in the succession of Alfred the Great’s son, King Edward. Edward rules over Wessex, Mercia and East Anglia, and as he lay dying, Uhtred swears an oath to Edward’s likely successor, Aethelstan, to kill his rivals to the throne, Aethelhelm and his evil and rotten nephew, Aelfweard.

Uthred, a pagan and a feared warrior, would like to sit out the medieval game of thrones, but the oath is important to him, although he calls it a “fool’s errand.” With a small army he boards “Spearharfoc,” a warship equipped with sail and 40 rowers, and sails into the fray.

Uthred is soon engaged in numerous sea and land battles, which Mr. Cornwell describes in vivid and accurate historical detail. 

You can read the rest of the review via the below link:

https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2020/feb/24/book-review-sword-of-kings/  

Tuesday, October 11, 2016

The Flame Bearer: Bernard Cornwell On How Meeting His Real Father Inspired A Saxon Epic


Stephen Lewis at the British newspaper the York Press offers a piece on how author Bernard Cornwell came to write a series of historical novels on the Saxons and a character called Uhtred of Bebbanburg..

THERE aren’t many characters in modern historical fiction that grab you by the throat the way Bernard Cornwell’s Uhtred of Bebbanburg does. He’s foul-mouthed, lustful, bad tempered, and soaked in the blood of the enemies he’s slaughtered. But he also has a great way with words, talking straight to the reader like an actor confiding to camera.
How about this, from the opening page of The Pale Horseman, the second in Cornwell’s series of novels set during the time of King Alfred, which have been turned into the BBC series The Last Kingdom.
“These days I look at twenty-year-olds and think they are pathetically young, scarcely weaned,” Uhtred, the novel’s narrator, begins. “But when I was twenty I considered myself a full-grown man. I had fathered a child, fought in a shield wall and was loathe to take advice from anyone. In short, I was arrogant, stupid and headstrong..."
Through the course of nine novels, Uhtred gets older and more grizzled but not much wiser as he fights, plunders and murders his way through a Dark Ages England torn by savage wars between the Saxons and the invading Danes, or Vikings. Along the way, he also manages to become King Alfred’s most fearsome warrior-general. Which is interesting, because he hates Alfred, and all Christians, as pious hypocrites.

You can read the rest of the piece via the below link:
 http://www.yorkpress.co.uk/news/14792892.Bestseller_Bernard_Cornwell_s_got_a_date_in_York/

Note: Although the series on Uhtred is interesting and entertaining (and I also enjoyed the BBC TV series adapted from the novels), I wish Bernard Cornwell would return to writing about Richard Sharpe, his roguish hero from the Napoleonic Wars.

I interviewed Bernard Cornwell about Sharpe a while back and you can read my Crime Beat column via the below link:

http://www.pauldavisoncrime.com/2012/12/a-q-with-sharpe-creator-bernard-cornwell.html 

Friday, January 22, 2016

Bookmonger Podcast: Bernard Cornwell Discusses 'Warriors Of The Storm' And His Other Works Of Historical Fiction


John J. Miller at National Review Online offers a podcast interview with historical fiction author Bernard Cornwell.

Author Bernard Cornwell talks about his new novel, Warriors of the Storm, the challenges of writing about England before the Norman Conquest, and how he wound up as an American citizen. 

You can listen to the interview via the below link:

http://www.nationalreview.com/media/bookmonger/bookmonger-bernard-cornwell-0


You can also read my interview with Bernard Cornwell about his Sharpe novels via the below link:

http://www.pauldavisoncrime.com/2012/12/a-q-with-sharpe-creator-bernard-cornwell.html

Sunday, April 5, 2015

Sharpe Author Bernard Cornwell Visits Waterloo

 
Bernard Cornwell, author of the Sharpe series and Waterloo: The True Story of Four Days, Three Armies and Three Battles, visited the scene of the great battle.
 
I have walked all of Wellington’s battlefields. Assaye, in India, is the least changed - a place where you can still kick musket balls out of the furrows where the Highlanders of the 74th suffered so grievously. I have climbed the Arapiles of Salamanca in Spain, perhaps the most beautiful of all the Duke’s battlefields, and marvelled at the grim walls of Badajoz where so many were to die in a night of slaughter, yet none of those places is as evocative as Waterloo.
 
The field of Waterloo has not been well kept. The damage began early when the Dutch made the Lion Mound, that great decaying monstrosity which marks the spot where the young Prince of Orange was wounded. My favourite moment of all the Sharpe books comes in Sharpe’s Waterloo when our hero does so much for the British cause by shooting the Prince who was, by far, the least capable commander on the field, yet whose monument now dominates the landscape.  

You can read the rest of the piece via the below link to the British newspaper the Telegraph:

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/battle-of-waterloo/11514684/Sharpe-author-Bernard-Cornwell-visits-Waterloo.html


You can read my Greathistory.com interview with Bernard Cornwell via the below link:

http://www.pauldavisoncrime.com/2012/12/a-q-with-sharpe-creator-bernard-cornwell.html


You can also visit Bernard Cornwell's web site at http://www.bernardcornwell.net/.

Sunday, March 3, 2013

Grand Climax Stars English Bow: Frank Wilson Reviews Bernard Cornwell's '1356'


My friend and former editor Frank Wilson reviewed Bernard Cornwell's historical novel 1356 for the Philadelphia Inquirer.  

On Sept. 19, 1356, a combined English and Gascon army under the command of Edward of Woodstock, the heir to the English throne who came to be known as the Black Prince, decisively defeated a larger French force near the city of Poitiers. It was one of England's three great victories in the Hundred Years' War (the others being Crecy and Agincourt).

The battle serves as the fortissimo conclusion to the latest installment of Bernard Cornwell's Grail Quest Series, featuring English bowman Sir Thomas of Hookton, whose role in life seems to be to rid the world of dangerous relics. This time he's in search of La Malice, said to be the sword that Peter used to cut off the ear of the High Priest's servant in the Garden of Gethsemane when Jesus was arrested. The English want the sword. So does the Church. Or at least, Cardinal Bessieres, the papal legate to the court of France, does. 

You can read the rest of the review via the below link:

http://www.philly.com/philly/entertainment/20130303_Grand_climax_stars_English_bow.html

You can also visit Frank Wilson's literary blog via the below link:

http://booksinq.blogspot.com

Note: I interviewed Bernard Cornwell about his Richard Sharpe series for GreatHistory.com. You can read the interview via the below link:

http://www.pauldavisoncrime.com/2012/12/a-q-with-sharpe-creator-bernard-cornwell.html

Friday, December 28, 2012

My Crime Beat Column: My Q & A With Sharpe Creator Bernard Cornwell


I was introduced to Bernard Cornwell’s Napoleonic-era, fictional British soldier Richard Sharpe when PBS aired the British TV series Sharpe's Rifles in America many years ago. I watched the series again a few years ago on BBC America, and I went out and bought one of the books and read it. I was hooked. I’ve now read the entire series and a few of Cornwell’s other books as well.

As a student of espionage, I enjoyed the books because espionage plays a significant part in the series with Sharpe often playing the role of spy and counter-spy.

I contacted the author and spoke to him. Below is my Q &A with Bernard Cornwell:


Davis: Richard Sharpe is a rogue, but he is also honorable and heroic. Can you describe Sharpe?

Cornwell: Basically, Sharpe is a villain, but he’s on our side. Obviously, the genesis of Sharpe was Hornblower (C.S. Forester’s fictional naval hero). I’ve always loved the Hornblower stories. I was looking for an interesting name like Hornblower but I couldn’t find one, so I named him after my rugby hero. The name stuck. I wanted him to come up from the ranks because that would give him problems, although many officers came up through the ranks. The idea that British officers were aristocrats is complete rubbish. You had to buy your commission and most were what we would call middle class.

Davis: Was Sharpe based on a real person in history?

Cornwell: Not at all, though his promotions are based on a real guy - Trooper Ellery, a cavalryman, obviously, who rose from trooper to lieutenant colonel in the same time span as Sharpe.

Davis: What compelled you to write a series about the Napoleonic Wars, the Duke of Wellington and a fictional light infantry officer up from the ranks?

Cornwell: The need to make money! I was a producer in television and I'd immigrated to the States because of a blond - I'm still married to her - and the U.S. Government in it's wisdom refused me a green card, so I airily told Judy "I'll write a book." I always knew that i wanted to write a "Hornblower-on-land" series. It struck me as strange back in 1979 that a couple of writers were doing really well with Napoleonic naval series in C.S. Forester's wake, but no one was writing about the army. It struck me as a gap on the bookshelf. I'd long had a fascination with Wellington and his army, so the fit was natural.

Davis: Do you feel that espionage and intelligence is a vital aspect of warfare and does espionage play a significant role in your other series of books as well?

Cornwell: Yes, maybe the most important. Espionage is an integral part of warfare, so, yes, it plays a significant role in my other books.

Davis: Espionage plays an important part in your series, as you have Sharpe undertake intelligence and espionage missions for Major Michael Hogan, an exploring officer. What was an exploring officer and what role did Hogan play for Wellington in your novels?

Cornwell: The exploring officers were just that - officers who, mounted on very good horses, rode behind enemy lines to explore their dispositions. They wore uniforms so that, if captured, they could not be considered spies. Colquhoun Grant was the most famous, of course, but Wellington had several. Hogan really is not an exploring officer; he's based more on George Scovell. Read The Man Who Broke Napoleon's Codes by Mark Urban. Hogan probably had more responsibility than Scovell. If Wellington didn't have a Hogan, he should have, so I invented him. My favorite tale of Colquhoun Grant is that after his capture, the French refused to parole him. He escaped their custody and fled to Paris where he lived for three months, openly wearing his uniform! When asked what uniform it was, he replied that it was the United States Army! He got away with it too.

Davis: Why do you often pull Sharpe from the battlefield and send him on intelligence missions?

Cornwell: I tell adventure stories and espionage offers plenty of scope for betrayal, murder and mayhem.

Davis: Your books have so many vivid characters in addition to Sharpe. I particularly like your villain Sgt. Hakeswill. He was a great character.

Cornwell: It was stupid to kill him off.

Davis: During the Napoleonic era the British were very good at spying, were they not?

Cornwell: The British ran a very sophisticated secret service that stretched right across Europe, quite apart from Wellington's military intelligence.

Davis: Did it help Wellington that the French were hated by the Spanish and the Portuguese who provided him intelligence?

Cornwell: Definitely, the entire population was on his side. If anything, there was simply too much intelligence coming in.

Davis: How important was intelligence to Wellington and his successes?

Cornwell: Huge! He had spies throughout occupied Spain. The partisans brought him captured dispatches, often still blood-stained, and he had sources inside France. The intelligence network was amazing, and it has never been adequately described. There was a tailor who worked at Irun, the town through which all French troops passed on their way to the war. The tailor worked on his doorstep, counted every man, horse and gun that passed his house, which was on the main road, and within days his reports were in Wellington's hands. Wellington probably knew more about the French than they did themselves.

Davis: What was the Duke of Wellington truly like, and how significant were his accomplishments?

Cornwell: He's brilliant. He's intelligent. He's a snob. He's too cold to his men and he had no small talk, but they were extremely loyal to him because they knew he did best to preserve their lives, unlike Napoleon. Wellington had an uncanny ability to spot ground, and he had a feel for what was on the other side of the hill. He stays calm in battle. He's cautious, but capable of sudden flamboyant movements, such as the attack at Salamanca. In the end, he's the only general who was capable of defeating Napoleon, albeit a close run thing. So, with Admiral Nelson, he's the begetter of Europe in the 19th Century.

Davis: You admire Wellington, clearly, and you offer a fine portrait of him in the Sharpe series, but what do you think of Napoleon?

Cornwell: I don't like the man. He was so careless with his men's lives. he said scornfully "What are a million men to me?" Napoleon was one of those generals, a bit like Patton, who really didn't care how many of his men got killed as long as he got his victory. He was a very ruthless man. He wanted to be the next Alexander the Great. He also had extraordinary charm and he was a fascinating man. He was a dangerous man because he was in love with war. Wellington was never in love with war. He didn't like war. Wars had to be fought, you had to do it well, you had to win, but it was not by itself a good thing. For Napoleon, war was a good thing, an exciting thing. I think that was the difference between them.


Davis: Are you fond of the Sharpe TV series and how do you feel about Sean Bean's portrayal of Richard Sharpe?

Cornwell: I love both.

Davis: You've said that you're not an historian, you're a storyteller, a novelist, but how accurate are the major historical events in your novels?

Cornwell: I try to make them as accurate as possible, but the story takes precedence, so I do change things, but I confess my sins in the Historical Note at the book's end. The obvious example is in Sharpe's Company. No British soldier got through the breaches at Badajoz - the feint excalade on the castle worked, against all odds - but the drama of that awful night was in the breaches. And so Sharpe had to be there, and if Sharpe is there he will get through the breach. So I changed reality for fiction, but I confessed afterwards.

Davis: Lastly, do you plan to write more about Sharpe?

Cornwell: Definitely.

Note: The above column originally appeared in GreatHistory.com in 2009.

Thursday, October 4, 2012

Poitiers: The Great Battle That History Forgot, Says Sharpe Creator Bernard Cornwell

 
Bernard Cornwell, the historical fiction writer who created the Richard Sharpe character, writes in the British newspaper the Daily Mail that the Battle of Poitiers was one of the greatest battles in history.

It has always seemed strange to me that we remember the Battle of Crecy and we celebrate the Battle of AginCourt, but most people seem to have forgotten Poitiers - the other great victory in the Hundred Years War - yet it was just as remarkable a triumph. In some ways, even more so.

You can read the rest of the piece via th below link:

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2212586/The-battle-history-forgot-Sharpe-creator-Bernard-Cornwell-says-little-known-victory-600-years-ago-greatest-military-triumphs-British-history.html?ito=feeds-newsxml

You can also read my friend and former editor at the Philadelphia Inquirer, Frank Wilson's review of Bernard Cornwell's historical novel, Death of Kings, via the below link:

http://pauldavisoncrime.blogspot.com/2012/06/review-of-bernards-death-of-kings.html


And you can check out my interview with Bernard Cornwell about his great Richard Sharpe historical novels at GreatHistory.com via the below links:

http://greathistory.com/interview-with-sharpe-creator-bernard-cornwell.htm

http://greathistory.com/interview-with-sharpe-creator-bernard-cornwell-part-ii.htm

http://greathistory.com/interview-with-sharpe-creator-bernard-cornwell-part-iii.htm


Saturday, March 10, 2012

A Rogue On Our Side: Bernard Cornwell Discusses His Character Richard Sharpe On The 30th Anniversary of 'Sharpe's Eagle'



Bernard Cornwell, the author of a great series of historical novels featuring the Napoleonic-era fictional British rogue and soldier Richard Sharpe, was recently interviewed on a video that can be viewed at Youtube.com.

The author talks about the phenomenal success of Sharpe on the eve of Harper Collins' release of a commemorative edition of every novel in the series. This marks the 30th anniversary of the publication of the first of them, 'Sharpe's Eagle'.

You can watch the video via the below link:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1e-0HV4rVN8

You can also read my interview with Bernard Cornwell that appeared at GreatHistory.com via the below link:

http://www.pauldavisoncrime.com/2012/12/a-q-with-sharpe-creator-bernard-cornwell.html

Monday, November 15, 2010

Bernard Cornwell Discusses The Fort, His Latest Historical Novel

Bernard Cornwell, the author of the terrific Richard Sharpe series, discusses his new historical novel, The Fort, with Sarah Crown from the British newspaper The Guardian.

Cornwell (seen in the above photo) tells how he learned about a "forgotten story" from the American War of Independence, and how he came to debunk legendary hero Paul Revere.

You can view the video interview via the below link:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/video/2010/nov/03/bernard-cornwell-fort-novel

You can also go to an earlier post and read about the novel and listen to an audio interview with Cornwell via the below link:
*

Tuesday, October 5, 2010

An Interview With Bernard Cornwell, Creator of the Richard Sharpe Series, On His New American Revolutionary War Novel, The Fort

John J. Miller's Between the Covers radio program at National Review Online features an interview with Bernard Cornwell, the historical novelist.

Cornwell is the creator of Richard Sharpe, the Napoleonic-era British soldier who is featured in a wonderful series of novels and portrayed by Sean Bean in the popular BBC TV series.


Cornwell's new novel is The Fort, which is set during the American Revolutionary War

You can listen to the interview via the below link:

http://radio.nationalreview.com/betweenthecovers/post/?q=ZGEwMDdhNTZmODMxNTkyYzgwNDg4NDc2MWE3ODEwZTQ=

Below is a description of the novel from the publisher, HarpersCollins:

"While the major fighting of the war moves to the south in the summer of 1779, a British force of fewer than a thousand Scottish infantry, backed by three sloops-of-war, sails to the desolate and fog-bound coast of New England.

Establishing a garrison and naval base at Penobscot Bay, in the eastern province of Massachusetts that would become Maine, the Scots—the only British troops between Canada and New York—harry rebel privateers and give shelter to American loyalists.

In response, Massachusetts sends a fleet of more than forty vessels and some one thousand infantrymen to “captivate, kill or destroy” the foreign invaders. Second in command is Peleg Wadsworth, a veteran of the battles at Lexington and Long Island, once aide to General Washington, and a man who sees clearly what must be done to expel the invaders.

But ineptitude and irresolution lead to a mortifying defeat—and have stunning repercussions for two men on opposite sides: an untested eighteen-year-old Scottish lieutenant named John Moore, who will begin an illustrious military career; and a Boston silversmith and patriot named Paul Revere, who will face court-martial for disobedience and cowardice.

Grounded firmly in history, inimitably told in Cornwell's thrilling narrative style, The Fort is the extraordinary novel of this fascinating clash between a superpower and a nation in the making."

You can also read my GreatHistory.com three-part interview with Bernard Cornwell about his Sharpe series via the below links:

http://greathistory.com/interview-with-sharpe-creator-bernard-cornwell.htm

http://greathistory.com/interview-with-sharpe-creator-bernard-cornwell-part-ii.htm

http://greathistory.com/interview-with-sharpe-creator-bernard-cornwell-part-iii.htm