Agincourt
A Novel
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Audible Standard 30-day free trial
Buy for $35.99
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Narrated by:
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Charles Keating
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By:
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Bernard Cornwell
data-redactor-tag=""em"">Agincourt is classic Cornwell…[with] attention to historical detail, well-paced action, and descriptive writing that is a pleasure to read."" —data-redactor-tag=""em"">Bostondata-redactor-tag=""em""> Globe
Bernard Cornwell, the data-redactor-tag=""em"">New York Times bestselling “reigning king of historical fiction"" (data-redactor-tag=""em"">USA Today), tackles his most thrilling, rich, and enthralling subject yet—the heroic tale of data-redactor-tag=""em"">Agincourt. The epic battle immortalized by William Shakespeare in his classic data-redactor-tag=""em"">Henry V is the background for this breathtaking tale of heroism, love, devotion, and duty from the legendary author of the Richard Sharpe novels and the Saxon Tales. This extraordinary adventure will captivate from page one, proving once again and most powerfully, as author Lee Child attests, that “nobody in the world does this stuff better than Cornwell.""
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The Grit of the Middle Ages and Warfare
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A good book if you like mideaval battles
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This book was not as dry as other Conwell's I have read. It is gritty, bloody, dirty and disgusting. You are there in the middle of the mess surrounded by poor, stinking, starving wretches. And yet, for pages at a time you are participating in a great adventure.
I've read so much fact about this battle. I know it was an insignificant battle at the tale end of yet another ongoing and ultimately insignificant feud between England and France. But this little battle, that should never have been fought and the British should never have won has been studied by military tactitians for centuries. It's contribution to the art of war is undeniable. But it takes good fiction, like Cornwell's to make us think about the people behind the battle. How they felt, how they perceived the events as they occurred, how their perspective might have differed from the historians. That is what makes fiction a great way to explain history. And this book does that very well.
While it might not be Shakespeare, Cornwell's book does as much to explain the horrors of war as Henry V.
Two for the price of one
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Would you listen to Agincourt again? Why?
I found the background music at the beginning of each chapter to be useless and distracting.Would you be willing to try another one of Charles Keating’s performances?
NoGreat story, distracting theatrics
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