Napoleon
The Decline and Fall of an Empire: 1811-1821
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Pegasus Books
Published:14th Sep '23
Should be back in stock very soon

An accomplished Oxford scholar delivers a dynamic new history covering the last chapter of the emperor's life—from his defeat in Russia and the drama of Waterloo to his final exile—as the world Napoleon has created begins to crumble around him.
In 1811, Napoleon stood at his zenith. He had defeated all his continental rivals, come to an entente with Russia, and his blockade of Britain seemed, at long last, to be a success. The emperor had an heir on the way with his new wife, Marie-Louise, the young daughter of the Emperor of Austria. His personal life, too, was calm and secure for the first time in many years. It was a moment of unprecedented peace and hope, built on the foundations of emphatic military victories.
But in less than two years, all of this was in peril. In four years, it was gone, swept away by the tides of war against the most powerful alliance in European history. The rest of his life was passed on a barren island. This is not a story any novelist could create; it is reality as epic.
Napoleon: The Decline and Fall of an Empire traces this story through the dramatic narrative of the years 1811-1821 and explores the ever-bloodier conflicts, the disintegration and reforging of the bonds among the Bonaparte family, and the serpentine diplomacy that shaped the fate of Europe. At the heart of the story is Napoleon’s own sense of history, the tensions in his own character, and the shared vision of a family dynasty to rule Europe.
Drawing on the remarkable resource of the new edition of Napoleon’s personal correspondence produced by the Fondation Napoleon in Paris, Michael Broers dynamic new history follows Napoleon’s thoughts and feelings, his hopes and ambitions, as he fought to preserve the world he had created. Much of this turns on his relationship with Tsar Alexander of Russia, in so many respects his alter ego, and eventual nemesis. His inability to understand this complex man, the only person with the power to destroy him, is key to tracing the roots of his disastrous decision to invade Russia—and his inability to face diplomatic and military reality thereafter.
Even his defeat...
Praise for Napoleon:
"Broers is doubly gifted as a storyteller, master of the telling detail as well as of the larger currents sweeping across that part of the world that both helped and hindered Napoleon. It is in this volume, of course, that Napoleon’s world falls apart and sees him exiled to St. Helena. It is a measure of the author’s skill that the reader feels a twinge of regret for the delusional despot and his last days on a barren rock." * Air Mail *
“'Extraordinary times produced an extraordinary man,' Michael Broers writes in the third and final volume of his extraordinary biography of Napoleon Bonaparte. Mr. Broers’s trilogy is well-planned and skillfully executed. Like its subject’s character, the story it tells is both engrossing and appalling." -- Dominic Green * Wall Street Journal *
"A masterful and unfailingly insightful examination of Napoleon’s final years" * Library Journal, starred review *
"Broers continues his run of satisfying books on Napoleon...An outstanding addition to the groaning bookshelves on one of the world’s most recognizable leaders." * Kirkus Reviews, starred review *
Praise for Michael Broers’s Napoleon: The Spirit of the Age:
“The great strength of Broers’s book arises from its detail, empathy, and even-handedness. He presents his information clearly and sometimes even lyrically. This is a serious work, the product of reflection as well as research befitting a distinguished professor of Western European History at Oxford.” -- Michael Dirda * The Washington Post *
"The finest biography of Napoleon ever written. A wonderful amalgam of deep knowledge, elegant prose and compelling argument.” * The Daily Telegraph *
"The scholarship is impressive, the narrative has the pace and panache appropriate to the subject, and there is much that is new, particularly when Broers probes behind the glitzy façade of Bonaparte's empire.” * The Times (London) *
"What one wants of a biography on this scale is the scholarship without the show, and that is just what Broers delivers. Empathy never gets the better of his critical detachment. This is a biography to trust." * The Spectator *
ISBN: 9781639364657
Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 56mm
Weight: 794g
768 pages