A short biography of Wellington, the Iron Duke, one of the best known military commanders of British history. Covers not only Wellington the war hero and Waterloo, but also his political career and Wellington the ladies' man and his marriage to Kitty Pakenham.
This abridgment does scant justice to the man Arthur Wellesley and even less to his military genius. It sucks all the life out of the story, leaving just names and places of famous campaigns and victories. Wellington's second career as a political leader is beyond boring. Maybe her 2-vol. biography is better. But if you want to know what it was like to be a soldier in Wellington's army, you're better off reading the Sharpe series by Bernard Cornwell, which follows all the battles - from the Tippoo of India to Napoleon at Waterloo - under command of The Peer, as Wellesley was called by his men, whom he tended to look down on as "the scum of the earth", none more so than the rifleman Richard Sharpe, who rises through the ranks to become an officer in the British army despite his low-born beginnings. If you want to see what became of Wellington, as he came to be known, watch for him in the Masterpiece Theatre series "Victoria". There his iron will comes up against a much stronger will in Her Majesty the Queen.
I came to this book after watching the 1990s UK TV series 'Sharpe' that tracks as corporal Sharpe rises through the ranks in Wellington's army during the Peninsula Wars. I expected deeper details about Arthur Wellesley (Duke of Welington) but the book did not serve it. It is quick glance at the life of Wellington without any particular in depth details. I suppose that's what a pocket biography ought to do.
Combined edition of Elizabeth Longford's two-part biography of the Duke of Wellington. Very readable. Interesting insight into one of Britain's greatest generals.