Sharpe’s Havoc: The Northern Portugal Campaign, Spring 1809
Written by Bernard Cornwell
Narrated by Paul Mcgann
4.5/5
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About this audiobook
The latest book in the brilliant, bestselling Sharpe series brings Sharpe to Portugal, and reunites him with Harper.
It is 1809 and Lieutenant Sharpe, who belongs to a small British army that has a precarious foothold in Portugal, is sent to look for Kate Savage, the daughter of an English wine shipper. But before he can discover the missing girl, the French onslaught on Portugal begins and the city of Oporto falls.
Sharpe is stranded behind enemy lines, but he has Patrick Harper, he has his riflemen and he has the assistance of a young, idealistic Portuguese officer. Together, they have to find the missing girl and extricate themselves from the entanglements cast by Colonel Christopher, a mysterious Englishman who has his own ideas on how the French can be ejected from Portugal. Those ideas are as fantastic as they are dangerous, but the French are rampant, Lisbon is threatened and Christopher sees Sharpe and his riflemen as the only obstacles to his subtle scheme.
But there is a newly arrived British commander in Lisbon, Sir Arthur Wellesley, and just when Sharpe and his men seem doomed, Sir Arthur mounts his own counter-attack, an operation that will send the French army reeling back into the northern mountains. Sharpe becomes a hunter instead of the hunted and he will exercise a dreadful revenge on the men who double-crossed him.
Sharpe's Havoc is a classic Sharpe story, a return to Portugal in the company of Sergeant Patrick Harper, Captain Hogan and Sharpe's beloved Greenjackets.
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 Havoc
16 ratings11 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Although Shoehorned between Sharpe's Rifles and Sharpe's Eagle, with the usual (small) discontinuity errors that the latter books have in common, Sharpe's Havoc feels like an integral part of the series. After the British army's defeat in Spain, the British forces evacuate the port of Oporto and Sharpe and his band of rifleman find themselves caught between enemy lines.Sharpe's Havoc sees the return of Sir Arthur Wellesley to Portugal and the impact of his arrival with the British forces transformed from the rabble we see in Sharpe's Rifles to the efficient fighting force of Sharpe's Eagle.On a more personal note for Sharpe we see frictions between the Lieutenant and his riflemen, frictions that were not apparent in Sharpe's Eagle. Sharpe's Havoc has all the action that we have come to expect from Bernard Cornwell and sets the scene nicely for the start of the 'proper' series in Sharpe's Eagle.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5It is 1809 and the French,under Marshal Soult have invaded Portugal. Richard Sharpe is cut off from the British force and is attempting to rejoin it. In doing so he also tracks a traitor and pursues a deserter.A splendid addition to this wonderful series.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Filled to the brim with mayhem, murder and malicious maniacal madness this seventh installment in the Sharpe series is astonishing. Cornwell’s tendency towards historical accuracy while maintaining macabre sense of action and suspense entices the reader to rush forward like one of the “forlorn hopes” he illustrates so well. I can hardly wait to put my grubby hands on the next installment.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Enjoy series do much I/we bought the books & videos.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5#7 in the Richard Sharpe series.6 months after escaping from Spain into Portugal, Sharpe and his men find themselves accompanying Captain Hogan of the Royal Engineers as he maps northern Portugal for the British Army garrisoning Oporto, with the French Army on its way.Suddenly, Kate Savage, the daughter of a British wine factor in Oporto disappears. Hogan orders Sharpe to the Savage family summer home, Vila Real de Zedes, in order to find Kate and return her to her mother. In addition, Sharpe is to accompany Colonel Christopher, a functionary of the Foreign Office, who is also looking for Kate and who has a mysterious diplomatic mission to accomplish for the British. in reality, Christopher is planning to become a traitor in order to curry favor with Napoleon and hopefully earn himself the right to rule northern Portugal.Before Sharpe and his men can leave Oporto, the French attack. Christopher disappears; Sharpe and his men are nearly trapped at the River Douro until they are led to safety by a very odd young Portuguese officer, Lieutenant Vincente. Sharpe and Vincente, with their combined troops, search in vain for a way to cross the river so that Sharpe and his men can head for Lisbon and the British garrison there.They are not successful, but find themselves in a series of nasty, desperate fights that eventually lead them back to Oporto to be reunited with British troops under Sir Arthur Wellesly where they participate in the battle to retake the city. The French are defeated; a race begins to overtake the defeated French Army and annihilate it. Sharpe plays a crucial role in the pursuit and effects a daring rescue as well.Sharpe's Havoc is nonstop action, even more so than in Sharpe's Rifles; this book is longer, and there is more space devoted to outstanding description of the fighting. Cornwell continues to turn out superbly written books in this genre. My only quibble with Sharpe's Havoc is that it could have used better editing. Evidently the only sound men or women could make during the Napoleonic Wars was the various conjugations of the verb "to scream". Additionally, Sharpe constantly comments "bitterly", too many times in the same or adjacent paragraphs. But these are minor flaws.As well as the outstanding battle descriptions, Cornwell spends a good deal of time describing the brutal French treatment of the Portuguese civilian population, including but not limited to the rape of women and young girls and the burning alive of villagers--"collateral damage". it is a grim look at the cost of war on a civilian population.There is an excellent map of the campaign in northern Portugal at the beginning of the book. As usual, Cornwell has written a Historical Note at the end separating historical fact from fiction, which leaves the reader--again, as usual--with the sense that he has gotten the history just right.Highly recommended.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Another enjoyable Sharpe episode. I suppose I will eventually read all of these, I do about one a year or so.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Maybe it's me, but I just couldn't get into this one the way I have with previous books in the series. I realize that writing historical fiction involves a lot of "connect the dots" and I just didn't seem to care for the way Cornwell did it this time. Two episodes worked for me, the night attack on the howitzer and the defense of the seminary, but the rest of the book seemed to be just wasting time until the next "dot" was reached.I did like how Sharpe was able to operate independently here, and I definitely emjoyed some of his subordinates, I just wish they were given more to do.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Wellington returns to command the British in Portugal after the enquiry into the convention of Cintra, and Sharpe is once more in the thick of things. A damsel in distress, and the battle of Oporto, the British version of the battle of Missionary Ridge, are features of a better Sharpe Novel.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Starting with a desperate evacuation of a town as an invading French army completes its conquest of northern Portugal and a pontoon bridge fails and sends hundreds of civilians to their crushed, watery deaths and ending with a freakily similar battle at another bridge in which the French receive more than a little poetic justice, Sharpe's Havoc is a hell of a fine read, like all of these books are.
It's a funny old thing, though, reading a series like Bernard Cornwell's Richard Sharpe books. But then again, the Sharpe books are rather a funny old series. For originally, there were just a few of these, and they were all set during and in the midst of the Peninsular War. Then they got very popular, so popular that they were adapted for television. The TV show, featuring the awesome likes of Sean Bean and Pete Postlethwaite and David Troughton, was very popular as well, so popular that there grew to be demand for more Sharpe books and TV adaptations of those books and somewhere in the middle of all of this came the notion that perhaps some prequel novels detailing Sharpe's pre-Napoleonic adventures might go over well and...
The result is a great heap of prose books that may be likened unto a long and convoluted run of a Big Two superhero comic book, rich with minutia and ret-conning and related geek-bait (the geeks in question this time being military history buffs, and damned if Cornwell isn't turning me into one of those. I found myself doting over the details of how Baker rifles work and the finer points of using case shot [and learning where the term "shrapnel" came from]), daunting in the extreme for the newcomer, who has two basic choices in how to approach this mass of material:* in publication order, or in chronological order. Choose publication order and you're going to be all over the place, historically speaking, starting out on the Peninsula in the middle of the Talavera Campaign in 1809, proceeding more or less chronologically for a while, but pretty soon you're lurching back and forth in time as though you had a TARDIS, not coming to, say, our man's adventures in India in 1799 until you've read a whole lot of novels. The thought of that makes my brain hurt a little, so I opted to read the novels in chronological order. As I've mentioned elsewhere, the fact that said order begins in India made that choice even more appealing.
But reading chronologically is not without its perils, too. While I'm sure the publication order readers just see an ever ascending level of quality in the writing, the characterizations, the battle scenes, etc. as they move on in the series, we chronological readers must weather lots of unexpected peaks and valleys, not to mention what seem like glaring omissions (for instance, last novel, Sharpe's Rifles, contained no references to Lady Grace, whom Sharpe wooed and won in the middle of the battle of Trafalgar, because when SR was written she had not yet been written into existence and readers are presented with a Sharpe that seems to have little experience with women except as casual whores, which is jarring for those of us who have read our man's Indian adventures and seen him happily, if still somewhat temporarily, paired with many lovely ladies). But we weather them happily, because Sharpe is awesome.
But so, Sharpe's Havoc is very much a case in point. It takes place not long after the events chronicled in SR, but while SR is a very early book (though still not the very first; the very first Sharpe novel is... the next one after SH in the chronological list), presenting Sharpe as greener and less confident than we've gotten used to seeing him, SH was written some 20 odd years later, after Cornwell had written many more novels, including the Indian prequels, and developed his firm and masterful command of the art of writing a Sharpe story.
Which is to say that from my perspective, SH looks to be one of the best, if not the best, of the Sharpe novels, and certainly my favorite since Sharpe's Fortress, the best of the three India books. Sharpe is 100% Sharpe, smart, capable, cunning, sometimes cruel, stubborn and devastatingly creative, qualities he desperately needs as he struggles not only against the French, against the deprivations and duties of wartime abroad, but also against the machinations of yet another turncoat superior officer. His main foe this time around, Colonel Christopher, can't hold a candle to Major Dodd in the scary-danger department being more of a political schemer and a misguided idealist, but that makes him all the more actually dangerous to Sharpe**, who can handle any jerk on the battlefield or in skirmishes of all sorts, but who is still pretty rough and clueless when it comes to society and the way it works -- or is supposed to work.
And of course, Christopher is far from Sharpe's only problem. His men are still cut off from the rest of their regiment and sort of juking their way through the war at Arthur Wellesley's whim. The Iberian peninsula is crawling with French soldiers. The ordinary people are unreliable; many passionately committed to maintaining their independence from Napoleon's empire but ill-trained and ill-equipped and looking to people like Sharpe to make up for their deficiencies. Generals and other superiors have high expectations for him, too, but are a bit out of touch with what he's dealing with, sometimes by nature, sometimes due to circumstances, and sometimes because of Christopher's machinations. And then there's the novel's Girl, this time the pretty young heiress to a British wine dynasty who has grown up in Portugal and refuses to leave it despite the danger. Thank goodness Sharpe is too busy to do the predictable by her, this time around, at least.
Does SH feel at times a bit formulaic? Yes, yes it does at times. Cornwell is going back to the same wells - turncoat officers, pretty women in need of rescue but not entirely helpless (thus even more attractive to Sharpe), natives/partisans of both kinds: noble/proud and gutless/scheming, big sweeping battle scenes and expertly presented representations of the ordinary soldier's life - but they're good wells to go back to, yielding high quality stuff every time. It's still mostly fresh, here, but as I read, part of me sort of longed to go back to the unevenness and occasional roughness of the earlier books as being more likely to have actual surprises in store for me. Here, everybody seems just a little embalmed. Consummately embalmed, but embalmed all the same.
Despite that, SH is a fantastic read, amusing, emotional, bloody and thrilling. If I haven't convinced you to give Sharpe a try by now, seven books into the series, I despair of you. I really do. It's everything most of my people read books for and then some.
*Well, perhaps three, if you want to count just reading them in any random order. Or many more than three if you want to treat every possible reading order as a separate choice. But come on.
**Though dude, do not make off with Sharpe's telescope, a gift from Sir Arthur Wellesley he has cherished since receiving it (and his battlefield commission) on saving the future Iron Duke's life back in India. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Sharpe has another exciting adventure, he fights impossible odds and rescues the girl.And gets his telescope back!
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Typical, fast-moving Sharpe adventure.