Sharpe's Fury
Book
This is the long-awaited twenty-first novel in the number
one bestselling series featuring Richard Sharpe. In the winter
of 1811 the war seemed lost. All Spain has fallen to the French,
except for Cadiz which is now the Spanish capital and is under
siege. Wellington and his British army are in Portugal, waiting
for spring to spark the war to life again. Richard Sharpe and
his company are part of a small expeditionary force sent to
break a bridge across the River Guadiana. What begins as a
brilliant piece of soldiering turns into disaster, thanks to
the brutal savagery of the French Colonel Vandal who is leading
his battalion to join the siege of Cadiz. Sharpe extricates
a handful of men from the debacle and is driven south into
the threatened city. There, in Cadiz, he discovers more than
one enemy. Many Spaniards doubt Britain's motives and believe
their future would be brighter if they made peace with the
French, and one of them, a baleful priest, secures a powerful
weapon to break the British alliance. He will use a beautiful
whore and the letters she received from a wealthy man. The
priest will use blackmail, and Sharpe must defeat him in a
sinister war of knife and treachery in the dark alleys of the
city. Yet the alliance will only survive if the French siege
can be lifted. An allied army marches from the city to take
on the more powerful French and, once again, a brilliant piece
of soldiering turns to disaster, this time because the Spanish
refuse to fight. A small British force is trapped by a French
army, and the only hope now lies with the outnumbered redcoats
who, on a hill beside the sea, refuse to admit defeat. And
there, in the sweltering horror of Barossa, Sharpe finds Colonel
Vandal again. "Sharpe's Fury" is based on the real
events of the winter of 1811 that led to the extraordinary
victory of Barossa, the battle which saw the British capture
the first French eagle of the Napoleonic Wars.