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Sharpe's Escape
Sharpe's Escape
Sharpe's Escape
Audiobook14 hours

Sharpe's Escape

Written by Bernard Cornwell

Narrated by Patrick Tull

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars

4.5/5

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About this audiobook

From New York Times bestselling author Bernard Cornwell, the tenth installment in the world-renowned Sharpe series, chronicling the rise of Richard Sharpe, a Private in His Majesty’s Army at the siege of Seringapatam.

Sharpe’s job as Captain of the Light Company is under threat and he has made a new enemy, a Portuguese criminal known as Ferragus. Discarded by his regiment, Sharpe wages a private war against Ferragus – a war fought through the burning, pillaged streets of Coimbra, Portugal’s ancient university city.

Sharpe’s Escape begins on the great, gaunt ridge of Bussaco where a joint British and Portuguese army meets the overwhelming strength of Marshall Massena’s crack troops. It finishes at Torres Vedras where the French hopes of occupying Portugal quickly die.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherHarperAudio
Release dateJan 25, 2005
ISBN9780060784522
Sharpe's Escape
Author

Bernard Cornwell

BERNARD CORNWELL is the author of over fifty novels, including the acclaimed New York Times bestselling Saxon Tales, which serve as the basis for the hit Netflix series The Last Kingdom. He lives with his wife on Cape Cod and in Charleston, South Carolina.

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Reviews for Sharpe's Escape

Rating: 4.34375 out of 5 stars
4.5/5

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  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I picked this book up at a used bookstore, and it just happened to be the tenth in the series (something that has been happening to me a lot lately).So I was here introduced to Captain Richard Sharpe, a ruthless soldier fighting in the Bussaco Campaign, 1810 Portugal. Besides battling the French, Sharpe has taken a disliking to a new captain, Slingsby, who is vying to take over his men, and has made an enemy of a traitor who is selling food to the French army.This book wasn't lacking in action, and kept the plot moving quickly. I never felt that any particular scene had me reading on the edge of my seat, but it was never boring.This book was more entertaining than revolutionary, and I liked the subtle humor. I also liked the atmosphere of this book - I felt immersed in army life amidst all of the talk about strategy, battles, soldiers, and so on. It all came across as well researched and aptly written. I liked the character of Captain Sharpe, a ruthless man who has trouble following army rules and bending to authority. I liked that he wasn't the typical soldier, riding a white horse (he doesn't even like horses) and trying to compromise between orders to kill and a conscience. One of Sharpe's duties is to roam the land searching for food, bakeries, ovens, and destroy them all, so that the French will be starved into surrender. But what about the women and children who rely on that food to survive? They are barely mentioned.However, I found Sharpe a bit too much of a "bad guy" at certain intervals. For example, he is jealous of a new captain, Slingsby, and fears that he means to take over his treasured position. He also finds the man exceedingly annoying. So, during a battle, Sharpe aims his gun at Slingsby... And fires! I was surprised. To have the hero of the story contemplate murdering a rival is one thing, to actually and genuinely try is quite another! The only other problem I saw in this book was the depiction of women during the time period. A proper young Englishwoman named Sarah Fry finds herself kissing a shirtless Sharpe only hours after meeting him, and losing her virginity to him later that night. Sharpe's companions also just so happen to stumble upon another young woman, who is also all too happy to sleep with the one who found her. Perhaps this aspect of the book was put in to further the notion that Sharpe is an irresistible ladie's man, but I simply found it too unrealistic. It is highly, highly unlikely that a well-raised English girl of the early 1800's would behave that way.Other than that, this book was fine. Although I probably won't go looking for any of the other Sharpe books, if I happen across one in my book-hunting, I'd be happy to read more of his adventures.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    The person reading this book is terrible compared to the narrator in the previous novels. The voice he created for the main character Sharpe is weak and he mumbles some of those lines where it is difficult to understand what the lead character is saying or thinking. Good book, bad narration.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Excellent write up of the battle of Bussaco and description of the Lines of Torres Vedras.Sharpe come across as very gritty in this book, even more so than usual. He retains his usual ability to operate while suffering from major injuries.I enjoyed the English governess who actually manages to find something positive about wading naked through a Roman sewer.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I am now officially obsessed with the Lines of Torres Vedras. Which is hilarious, since I'd never even heard of the Lines of Torres Vedras until a few weeks ago, when I read a highly fictionalized/romanticized version of one possible way those amazing fortification/lines of defense/great big military things were built and paid for in Sharpe's Gold. Now in Sharpe's Escape, I get a closer look at what they were for and how they were intended to -- and actually did -- work.

    The principle, basically, is this: build two all but nation-spanning lines of forts and earthworks and walls that keep your enemies from reaching a desirable target, say, the city of Lisbon, and then, quickly before said enemy arrives, practice the most severe scorched earth campaign you possibly can. There must be no food or potable water of any kind anywhere. Armies march on their stomachs, and Napoleon didn't like big bellies so made his armies raid for their suppers. No big vulnerable supply trains from France for Boney! His soldiers must root, hog, or die. Which makes them vulnerable to a plan like the Lines of Torres Vedras, which is basically meant to starve them out if they can't be killed any more quickly. Phew!

    And this is not just historical color here, for the plot of Sharpe's Escape is intimately concerned with this plan. Sharpe starts off the novel with an encounter with a Portuguese officer and the officer's brother and their stash of contraband flour they've been planning to sell to the French; he makes a grudging admirer of the former and a bitter enemy of the latter when he foils this plan and destroys the flour. Because what Sharpe needed most of all was another enemy, and this one a great big ruthless brute of a man, a true bastard who could almost be a combination of Sharpe himself and his giant Irish Sergeant, Pat Harper. Except, you know, not funny. Subsequent acts repeat and enlarge on this theme as it turns out the Portuguese duo, even though their country is being invaded by the French and the British are their allies in trying to fight the French off, have an even bigger plan to provide the French with even more food!

    It is in the midst of foiling that second, bigger version of this novel's treason plot that Sharpe finds himself in need of an escape, which takes him through a Roman sewer that is still in very foul and recent use in the company of his old friend Jorge Vincente (a Portuguese good guy), Sgt. Harper, a feisty Portuguese woman they've saved from rape, and a pretty Englishwoman who used to be a tutor to the children of the bad Portuguese officer and who Sharpe has also spared from rape. She doesn't like Sharpe too much at first, but ah, doesn't he know how to show a girl a good time?:

    "Something strange had happened to her in the last few minutes, as if by undressing and lowering herself into a sewer she had let go of her previous life, of her precarious but determined grip on respectability, and let herself drop into a world of adventure and irresponsibility. She was, suddenly and unexpectedly, happy."

    And now we know the secret of the old Sharpe charm. I wonder how many unacknowledged little Sharpes there wound up being in addition to the daughter he had with Lady Whossername from Sharpe's Trafalgar? I'm sorry, it's lazy and shallow of me, but Sharpe's Chicks are legion and I'm not in the mood to sift through the roster just now.

    Anyway, there was nothing in this novel to contradict Dave Slusher's Sharpe Trek theory, and that's fine with me. These are fine adventure stories, and I continue to love and fear their hero devotedly. But no, I would not be one of Sharpe's Chicks. Not in the days before penicillin and whatnot.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Set in the Penninsular War, Sharpe destroys a supply of food that was going to be sold to the French by two Portuguese and creates an implacable, ruthless enemy. Closer to home, his commanding officer tries to sideline him so another officer can gain more experience and (Sharpe fears) take over his job.
    This is a fast-paced, exciting adventure where Sharpe has lots of death-defying encounters (as usual) and struggles hard to save the day.
    Wonderfully narrated by William Gaminara.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Tells the story of the Bussaco Campaign in Portugal in 1810. Sharpe is once again in trouble as he fights a personal war against a dangerous enemy.An extremely exciting episode in the Richard Sharpe series.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This one of the best Sharpe's! I'm fond of Bussaco, a classic Wellington battle, and the war reporting by Cornwell is well done. The scale of peril to our hero and the amount his actions will have on larger issues is well balanced in this book. It is not so much a spy story which can be a draw-back with Cornwell.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Cornwell uses the same formula here that he does with other Sharpe stories; sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't. This time, it's brilliant - the best Sharpe story since Sharpe's Fortress. Richard Sharpe and Patrick Harper are a two man wrecking crew, and my favorite characters in historical fiction.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    “Sharpe’s Escape” by Bernard Cornwell couples quite nicely all the elements of daring and adventure this reader has come to expect from Mr. Cornwell’s novels. All the Sharpe regulars -like Harper, Sharpe and the prerequisite lady in distress- are back with an old friend and a new vicious enemy. Naturally the action is replete and with such intricate and descriptive language as to make one feel they were actually at Bussaco hearing the Baker rifle fire and the French cries of “Vive l’Emperor.” I’ve become so enamored with Mr. Cornwell’s Sharpe novels that I savor them like a fine wine and take the time to appreciate each nuance and turn-of-phrase. Fans of Sharpe, enjoy.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    No. 10 in the Richard Sharpe series.It’s still 1810, and the British Army and Captain Richard Sharpe are still in Portugal. Bought by Sharpe’s stolen gold, Wellington has had built enormous defences known as the Torres Vedras just north of Lisbon, constructed with Sharpe’s stolen gold. Wellington has ordered the Portuguese countryside stripped of all food, hoping in that manner to force the French to retreat out of starvation, since Napoleon’s army existed by living off the land. As yet, the French do not have any idea of these new defences.But in any country, under any conditions, there are always those who put profit ahead of patriotism. Two such are the Ferreira brothers. One is a major in the Portuguese Army, playing both side, the English and the French. But, convinced that the French army is unstoppable, he throws in with them in order to safeguard his family fortune through war profiteering—making money by selling hoarded, contraband food while his countrymen starve. The other, nicknamed Ferragus, is a thug, a criminal for whom this is simply another way to earn even more money than he already has through other criminal activities.Sharpe runs into the brothers while on patrol as the allied army retreats down the country, headed for Lisbon. He and Ferragus strike up an instantaneous hatred, but for the present, Ferragus has to back down as Sharpe orders a supply of contraband food belonging to the brothers to be destroyed. But unknown to the British or Portuguese authorities, the brothers have hidden a huge amount of stores—food, forage, military supplies—in Ferragus’ warehouse in Coimbra, a town that is best known for its ancient university, one of the oldest in Europe. Sharpe is destined for a confrontation in Coimbra, a dramatic escape from the town—only to wind up at the Battle of Bussaco just north of the town.Standard Cornwell and Sharpe, with the usual climax of the story being a graphically-described bloody battle between the English and Portuguese on one side, and the French on the other. This has all the elements that a fan of the series is used to seeing—excitement, well-researched history, and excellent writing. Highly recommended.