My history with Bernard Cornwell’s fiction has been odd. I read THE ARCHER’S TALE, the first book in his Grail Quest series, loved it, and never read any more of them. I read REBEL, the first of his Nathaniel Starbuck series, loved it, and never read any more of them. For a long time, I’ve been wanting to try what’s arguably his best-known series about British soldier Richard Sharpe, but I worried I’d read one and never get back to them. But you never know without trying, and since I own almost all of the series in one form or another, I decided I might as well go ahead and read the first one, SHARPE’S TIGER.
Actually, this is the first Sharpe book chronologically but not the first one
published. After the series was well-established, Cornwell went back and wrote
several books filling in the character’s early history in the army, beginning with
Sharpe being a private during the British forces siege of the Indian city of
Seringapatam in 1799. Sharpe, who was a thief before joining the army, is pretty much
of a rogue, but he’s a great fighting man and has a core of decency to him. He
runs afoul of a truly despicable villain, a brutal sergeant named Obadiah
Hakeswill, and is tricked into committing a crime that gets him sentenced to a
flogging of two thousand lashes, an extreme punishment that will probably kill
him.
However, before the sentence can be carried out fully, Sharpe is picked for a
vital espionage mission. He has to pretend to be a deserter, get into the
besieged city, and rescue a captured British officer who has some vital
intelligence that may mean all the difference between victory and defeat.
Failing a rescue, Sharpe is supposed to obtain the information from the officer
and then escape.
That’s the basic plot, but while it’s fairly simple, Cornwell layers in some
twists and turns that are very clever and still sticks pretty close to the
actual history while at the same time giving the fictional Richard Sharpe
plenty of important stuff to do. I was really impressed by the way Cornwell
manipulated his plot and characters in this novel. To be honest, I thought this
book started on the slow side and I was beginning to wonder about the series’
sterling reputation, but when things kicked into gear about a quarter of the
way in, I was really hooked and dragged along. I mean, Sharpe fights giant
warriors, has to escape from a vicious tiger, and blows a bunch of stuff up. I
was really flipping the pages to see what was going to happen next.
There are also epic, very well-written battle scenes, vividly drawn historical
characters, effective touches of humor and pathos, good supporting characters,
and a top-notch protagonist in Richard Sharpe himself. SHARPE’S TIGER is a
terrific book, and I thoroughly enjoyed reading it. If you’re a fan of
historical adventure novels, I give it a very high recommendation. It's available on Amazon in e-book, audio, hardcover, and paperback editions.
And now the question remains . . . will I read more of the series? I’m pretty
sure I will, but as always, we’ll have to wait and see.
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