Bernard Cornwell is the author of the acclaimed New York Times bestsellers 1356 and Agincourt; the bestselling Saxon Tales, which include The Last Kingdom, The Pale Horseman, Lords of the North, Sword Song, The Burning Land, Death of Kings, The Pagan Lord, and, most recently, The Empty Throne; and the Richard Sharpe novels, among many others.
Sharpe's Fortress (Sharpe Series #3)
Paperback
(Reprint)
$12.49$14.99
| Save 17%
- ISBN-13: 9780061098635
- Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
- Publication date: 01/28/2002
- Series: Sharpe Series , #3
- Edition description: Reprint
- Pages: 320
- Sales rank: 37,302
- Product dimensions: 5.30(w) x 7.90(h) x 0.90(d)
What People are Saying About This
Eligible for FREE SHIPPING details
.
12.49
Out Of Stock
Be prepared for scenes of great action & heroic.
The sword hissed an inch behind the boy's neck.
"I said to leave him alone!"
Sharpe said. "Or do you want to fight me instead?"
"None of us," a calm voice said behind Sharpe, "wants to fight Ensign Sharpe."
Richard Sharpe.
Soldier, hero, rogue—the man you always want on your side. Born in poverty, he joined the army to escape jail and climbed the ranks by sheer brutal courage. He knows no other family than the regiment of the 95th Rifles, whose green jacket he proudly wears.
Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought
-
- Sharpe's Rifles (Sharpe…
- by Bernard Cornwell
-
- Sharpe's Siege (Sharpe…
- by Bernard Cornwell
-
- Sharpe's Revenge (Sharpe…
- by Bernard Cornwell
-
- The Virtues of War: A Novel of…
- by Steven Pressfield
-
- Emperor: The Field of Swords…
- by Conn Iggulden
-
- Flashman: A Novel
- by George MacDonald Fraser
-
- When Christ and His Saints…
- by Sharon Kay Penman
-
- Genghis: Birth of an Empire…
- by Conn Iggulden
-
- Rise to Rebellion: A Novel of…
- by Jeff Shaara
-
- No Less Than Victory: A Novel…
- by Jeff Shaara
-
- The Iron King (Accursed Kings…
- by Maurice Druon
-
- The Final Storm: A Novel of…
- by Jeff Shaara
-
- The Man from St. Petersburg
- by Ken Follett
-
- The Poisoned Crown
- by Maurice Druon
Recently Viewed
Economist
The direct heir to Patrick O'Brian.
People Magazine
Starring British officer Richard Sharpe (a kind of Indiana Jones, this novel, the 16th in a series, is a zippy joyride.
Wall Street Journal
Page-turners [that] fan clubs all over the world are devoted to.
People
Starring British officer Richard Sharpe (a kind of Indiana Jones, this novel, the 16th in a series, is a zippy joyride. Worth a look.
San Francisco Chronicle
Tom Clancy could pick up a pointer or two from Bernard Cornwell . . . Cornwell's blending of the fictional Sharpe with historical figures and actual battles gives the narrative a stunning sense of realism . . . If only all history lessons could be as vibrant.
Boston Globe
Excellently entertaining. If you love historical drama . . . then look no further.
Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly
Already a bestseller in the U.K., this 16th volume chronicling the heroic escapades of Richard Sharpe, a British soldier with Gen. Sir Arthur Wellesley (later the duke of Wellington), resumes the marathon historical narrative in India during the final battle of the Mahratta War of 1803. With an amorous French widow waiting for him back in Seringapatam, and carrying a fortune in jewels he has liberated from the Tippoo sultan, Ensign SharpeDnewly promoted from sergeantDis struggling to make a successful transition to officer responsibilities. Led by the murderous English turncoat Col. William Dodd, the Mahratta army withdraws to the impregnable mountaintop fortress of Gawilghur, where Dodd intends to defeat Wellesley and perpetrate a final treachery that will make him ruler of all India. Assigned to the service of Captain Torrance to assist with the supply train, Sharpe uncovers a large cache of misappropriated military supplies. The captain realizes that Sharpe suspects him and his sergeant, Obadiah Hakeswill, Sharpe's old nemesis, of stealing the supplies. He hands Sharpe over to Hakeswill, who takes his jewels and turns Sharpe over to a bandit leader to be killedDbut all is not lost. Resplendent with color and action, the stirring saga overwhelms the senses with the flash of sabers and the gore and din of battle. True to his adoring readers, Cornwell leaves no treachery unpunished as Sharpe again proves his mettle. (Nov.) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.
Library Journal
After marching his hard-fighting British rifleman Richard Sharpe through innumerable campaigns in the Napoleonic wars and beyond, Cornwell uses this latest novel to revisit a turning point in Sharpe's early career. Sharpe's Fortress is set in British India in late 1803, immediately after Arthur Wellesley (the future Wellington) has made Sharpe an officer. Typical of Cornwell's books, it quickly places the long-suffering hero in a nasty crisis and never lets up. Sharpe must fight two wars: one against the Mahratta, who defy British rule from their apparently impregnable mountaintop stronghold, the other against the class-conscious and narrow-minded British officers who won't accept an officer up from the ranks. One of the most intense and engaging Sharpe stories, this novel gains much from William Gaminara's strong reading. A can't-miss addition to libraries with patrons who appreciate well-crafted historical fiction.--R. Kent Rasmussen, Thousand Oaks, CA Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.\
Kirkus Reviews
Cape Cod resident Cornwell returns to his Napoleonic Wars series about Her Majesty's rifleman Richard Sharpe. Now an ensign, Sharpe in prequel Napoleonic novels set in India, moves to the Siege of Gawilghur, December 1803, and defends the Crown against the treasonous Sergeant Obidiah Hakeswill and the renegade Englishman William Dodd. Sharpe fans may well recall his joining with Sir Arthur Wellesley (later Duke of Wellington) at the Battle of Assaye in India, a battle Wellington in later years rated above his defeat of Napoleon at Waterloo, in Sharpe's Triumph (1999). Now, the Mahattra fortress of Gawilghur cannot be breached, despite all of Wellington's endurance against savage cannonades from the bastion. Who will find the sneaky way around the fortress and across the Inner Fort's wall? Do you need his initials? Meanwhile, we're told that the latest installment in the series, Sharpe's Trafalgar (not yet published here), hit the top of every major bestseller list in England and remained #1 for 12 weeks, surpassing Grisham's The Brethren. Twelve Sharpe novels have been filmed by PBS. HarperCollins plans a big relaunch of the series. Fabulous stuff.