Military histories are not something I normally go for, but caught short of fresh reading material, I picked this one up from my wife's finished pile (my wife being greatly interested in the Napoleonic Wars). The result was a pleasant surprise.
What Peter Snow has done is to humanize the conflict. There are, as expected, the usual block diagrams of troop arrangements, but instead of harping on the tactical advantages of hills or the importance of securing flanks, Snow's emphasis is, instead, on the reams of personal anecdotes from the ordinary soldiers whose lives were caught up and sometimes ended by the war. When I read about the Punic Wars earlier this year, the author tried to impress the scale of one battle by sheer statistics; here, Snow manages it simply by using the words of those involved. Short of including scratch and sniff cards for blood and powder, there's not much more he could have done to make you feel like you were there.
And it's quite a grisly story. Wellington' slow advance from Portugal to Toulouse came at an immense human cost, both for the British and - to a greater extent - to the French. Only Napoleon's retreat from Moscow did more damage to the Grande Armie. Waterloo, whilst greater in scale than Wellington's previous battles, was probably less brutal than Badajoz. As to the man himself, Snow doesn't paint a detailed portrait of the Duke (this isn't, after all, a biography) but his character comes across both from his own accounts and those of his men. Snippy, stubborn and arrogant, one can see why he subsequently proved a failure in politics, but for a battlefield he was clearly the right man for the job. What isn't entirely clear is why, for fighting a campaign which was essentially a sideshow to the main events of the war, he was so readily accepted as overall commander of the European forces at the final battle.
And that rather encapsulates the book. Those looking for a detailed history of the Napoleonic Wars will need to look elsewhere. Those whose interest, like my wife's, has come from watching Sharpe will find this a great way to find how close to the real thing Cornwell's fictional South Essex soldiers got.