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The Longest Afternoon
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Table of Contents

1. Prelude 2. For King and Fatherland 3. A Tragedy of Errors 4. Bolting the Barn Door 5. Inferno 6. Hand to Hand 7. 'Heat and centre of the strife' 8. Legacy: A 'German Victory'?

About the Author

Brendan Simms is a professor in the History of International Relations and fellow at Peterhouse College, Cambridge. The author of Europe, shortlisted for the Lionel Gelber Prize, he lives in Cambridge, England.

Reviews

New York Times Book Review "Simms tells the story of the combat for La Haye Sainte with the rich, gritty, eyewitness detail that it deserves... Simms' engaging narrative is one of bravery, terror and suffering... Simms offers a reminder that Waterloo was not fought just between the British and French, but was very much a European battle." Wall Street Journal "Mr. Simms's fluent and meticulously researched narrative nonetheless provides enough context to engage not only specialists, but also readers unfamiliar with the broader historical background. By focusing upon a particular episode, rather than the bigger picture, Mr. Simms manages to reflect the grim reality of Waterloo better than some more comprehensive surveys." Washington Post "A superb little book that is micro-history at its best." Financial Times "An hour-by-hour, blow-by-blow account by Brendan Simms of one particularly hard-fought segment of the battle...which achieves the difficult feat of looking from a fresh, useful angle on a subject that is among the most minutely scrutinized in European history...[a] vividly told story...[with] a pacy narrative that evokes the smoke, heat and confusion of battle" Spectator, UK "Very engaging" Battles and Book Reviews "Simms writes from the perspective of the mud-caked battlefield. As a result, Wellington's victory is presented in all its savagery, vainglory, and desperation... [I]t would seem that Waterloo was fought by soldiers who were tortured by right and wrong alike, men who intended to accomplish far more than killing." Military Review "Through his clever ability to entwine first-person accounting with historical narrative, Simms allows the reader to explore the many facets of the battle in detailed depth and vivid focus...This is a very authoriative piece. Between the number of powerful first-person accounts and detailed historical events, the book reads as a minute-by-minute eyewitness accounting. The deliberate story line and powerful detailing leaves little room for question...The greatest attraction of this book is its ability to tell the story of the battle in a very realistic sense...The reader is drawn into the history and given insight to feel the accountings in a very real and pragmatic fashion." Military History "Simms recounts the fight from a fresh angle, delivering a thoroughly satisfying addition to a vast genre... Aided by a surprising number of letters, memoirs and commentaries from participants, Simms write a vivid account even readers familiar with Waterloo should not pass up." Evening Standard, UK "A vivid and compelling account of a fight that for much of the afternoon was not merely a battle within a battle but was the battle itself." Weekly Standard "Short but action-packed book...patient readers will be rewarded by the meticulous way Simms assembles the pieces of an enormously complicated jigsaw puzzle." Washington Independent Review of Books "This tight, vivid account brings the reader into the heart of the epic conflict... [A] gripping and original account of men in battle." Providence Journal "[Simms] brings his readers into the mud and blood, into the near constant shelling, the cries of the wounded and dying. We are with these soldiers before the battle, hung over, hungry and soaking wet, and during the seemingly endless succession of infantry and cavalry charges." Roanoke Times "Told in clear, concise and colorful prose. The rich details and Simms' ability to breathe life into primary source documents make this an exceptional war story." Washington Times "Simms brings the life the intensity of war on a 19th-century battlefield, and the depth of bravery in both ranks." War on the Rocks "Narrative and microhistory at its best." Armchair General "An important and interesting perspective on a battle... An overview of battle often dehumanizes, describing units of men as mere chess pieces. This book joins many others that attempt to remedy that. There is so much more to be said about Waterloo, how it came to happen, its grand strategic impulses and consequences, Napoleonic warfare in general etc. But as a battle itself is performed by numerous actors in various positions, to be able to see one segment with such accuracy is instructive. Brendan Simms has done an admirable job." Library Journal, starred review "Simms does an admirable job of showing that stories do still count. This thoroughly engrossing account will thrill all history lovers." Publishers Weekly "For history readers who appreciate grainy, detailed battle accounts, this fine book concerns the carnage, heroism, and occasional stupidity that occurred around a single Belgian farmhouse at the center of the battlefield at Waterloo during a few hours in 1815... A remarkably detailed book." Kirkus "[A] gripping account of the bloody, heroic defense of La Haye Sainte...Simms takes advantage of abundant letters and memoirs to deliver an engrossing, often gruesome nuts-and-bolts description of that afternoon."

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