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Napoleon's Last Island

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The bestselling author of Schindler's List and The Daughters of Mars returns with an "insightful and nimble...consistently fresh and engaging" (The New York Times Book Review) novel about the remarkable friendship between a quick-witted young woman and one of history's most intriguing figures, Napoleon Bonaparte, during the final years of his life in exile on St. Helena.
In October 1815, after his defeat at the Battle of Waterloo, Napoleon Bonaparte was sent to live the remainder of his life in exile on the remote Southern Atlantic island of St. Helena. There, on what he called "the cursed rock," with no chance of escape, he found an unexpected ally: a spirited British teenager named Betsy Balcombe who lived on the island with her family. While Napoleon waited for his own accommodations to be made livable, the Balcombe family played host to the infamous exile, a decision that would have far-reaching consequences for them all.

In Napoleon's Last Island, based on a true story, acclaimed author Thomas Keneally re-creates Betsy's powerful and complex friendship with the man dubbed The Great Ogre, her clashes and alliances with his remaining courtiers, and her uneasy journey to adulthood as she begins to see the imperfections and weaknesses of human nature. As he brings a fascinating period vividly to life, Keneally shines a fresh light on one of history's most enigmatic, charismatic figures. "The book is a complex and mesmerizing success," raves the Christian Science Monitor, hailing it as "a masterpiece in miniature...unfailingly great reading [and] testimony to the fact that Keneally is our greatest living practitioner of historical fiction."
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 1, 2016
      Australian author Keneally (The Daughters of Mars) once again uses fiction to illuminate a little-known aspect of history. In 1815, Napoleon Bonaparte is exiled to the English-governed island of St. Helena. His residence not yet ready, he and his retinue are taken in by William Balcombe, a representative of the East India Company, who has two daughters, Betsy and Jane. The Balcombes, as well as everyone else on the island, find Napoleon to be a charming houseguest, instead of the Great Ogre. But 13-year-old Betsy, smart and independent-minded, is not so easily won over, and her relationship with the former emperor is initially fractious. Eventually, though, their friendship becomes the talk of the island. Then, a new governor to St. Helena, Sir Hudson Lowe, cracks down on Napoleon’s life in exile, cutting his household budget and staff and confiscating Christmas gifts, and even the Balcombes are made to suffer. Ultimately, a shocking scene forces Betsy to reevaluate everything she thinks she knows about her parents, her neighbors, and her new friend. Narrated by Betsy, Keneally’s book gives readers a persuasive account of this precocious teenager’s view of the world’s most infamous man. He makes Betsy an engaging and witty presence, and he charts her destiny into her post–St. Helena existence, where the short general’s long shadow continues to affect her life. Like the late E.L. Doctorow, Keneally adapts his style to suit his subject matter, and here the high formality of 19th-century journal-keeping helps bring alive the bittersweet last days of Napoleon.

    • Kirkus

      Napoleon's last exile on the island of St. Helena as related by a British teenager who befriended him.First, we witness the painful death of Napoleon Bonaparte, whose suffering is raised to the level of punishment by the grisly ministrations of drunken and or/quack physicians. The suspense does not lie in what happens to Napoleon but in how he gets to this pass. That is a story told with as much meandering as St. Helena's mountain roads by Betsy Balcombe, teenage younger daughter of William Balcombe, who's employed by the East India Company as a provisioner of goods on the island. When he's first brought to St. Helena, Napoleon, known variously according to one's patriotic bent as the Ogre, OGF (Our Great Friend), the Emperor, or the General, is kept under very commodious house arrest in a guesthouse of the Balcombe residence, the Briars. There, an affinity grows between him and Betsy, nurtured by reciprocal childish pranks and a mutual interest in horsemanship. With a small French entourage and a brimming larder supplied by the East India Company, Napoleon maintains a semblance of court life. The plot drags, though, as the book details Betsy's growing pains. Gradually she becomes aware of male suitors and also of her superior attractiveness vis-a-vis her long-suffering older sister, Jane. Her incipient womanhood threatens her cherished identity as a hellion, and she's disillusioned when a resentful admirer tells her that Napoleon was overheard extolling her feminine charms. There are far deeper disillusionments and betrayals to come. St. Helena's new British governor, Sir Hudson Lowe (in "Name and Nature," as he is dubbed by Betsy) arrives determined to make sure that Napoleon's exile more closely resembles jail. The strictures he places on the emperor and his ruinous allegations against William Balcombe for befriending him bring about the novel's dispiriting and attenuated denouement. The faux regency prose is convincing without being unduly daunting. Clearly, Keneally's sympathies lie firmly with Napoleon and the Balcombes, as will the reader's. COPYRIGHT(1) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      August 1, 2016
      Despite the title, Keneally's (Shame and the Captives, 2015) latest historical novel is an agonizing coming-of-age story, rather than a predictable chronicle of Napoleon's final years. Permanently exiled to the southern Atlantic island of Saint Helena ( the cursed rock ) after his disastrous defeat at Waterloo, Napoleon befriends a young girl and her family. Awaiting the completion of his permanent quarters, the former emperor is billeted with the Balcombe family. Fascinated by their temporary houseguest, each family member is inexorably drawn into his exotic and dysfunctional orbit to varying degrees, none more so than young Betsy. Though lopsided in many ways, the quirky friendship that blossoms between the two is understandable, given the spiritual and geographic isolation of both Bonaparte and Betsy. Unfortunately, Napoleon exacts as heavy a price in his personal relationships as he did in his military campaigns, and the Balcombe family is permanently splintered in his emotional war of attrition. Loosely based on actual events and real-life historical figures, Keneally's retelling of Napoleon's Saint Helena years through the eyes of a young girl on the cusp of womanhood makes for a deeply intriguing, if somewhat fanciful, read.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2016, American Library Association.)

    • Library Journal

      May 15, 2016

      Keneally will always be identified first with Schindler's List, but he's written 32 novels before this current offering, including the recent New York Times best-selling The Daughters of Mars. This novel focuses on Napoleon's last years on the island of Saint Helena, where he was banished after losing the Battle of Waterloo. There, he befriends an energetic British girl named Betsy Balcombe with whose family he lives while his own accommodations are being constructed. To say that this changed life for all involved would be an understatement.

      Copyright 2016 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Library Journal

      October 15, 2016

      In 1815, Napoleon arrives on the remote island of St. Helena to begin his exile under British control. He moves in temporarily to an empty house on the grounds of another residence occupied by a British family, the Balcombes. Their strong-willed, independent-minded teenage daughter Betsy tells the tale of their relationship to the former emperor. Almost immediately, Betsy and her family come under the spell of this charismatic and sympathetic character, cast as a villain by the British establishment and most of Europe but charming, deferential, and witty in the flesh. Later, Napoleon is relocated to another residence on St. Helena, and a new, more severe British commander assumes control of the island. Betsy and her family's friendship and helpfulness toward the exile come to be viewed as treasonous by the new authorities. VERDICT Evidently based on true accounts, the novel as told by Betsy has accurately reproduced the diction of a 19th-century writer, which occasionally slows the pace of this engaging work by well-known Australian author Keneally (Confederates; Schindler's List). [See Prepub Alert, 4/25/16.]--James Coan, SUNY at Oneonta Lib.

      Copyright 2016 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      August 1, 2016
      Napoleons last exile on the island of St. Helena as related by a British teenager who befriended him.First, we witness the painful death of Napoleon Bonaparte, whose suffering is raised to the level of punishment by the grisly ministrations of drunken and or/quack physicians. The suspense does not lie in what happens to Napoleon but in how he gets to this pass. That is a story told with as much meandering as St. Helenas mountain roads by Betsy Balcombe, teenage younger daughter of William Balcombe, who's employed by the East India Company as a provisioner of goods on the island. When he's first brought to St. Helena, Napoleon, known variously according to ones patriotic bent as the Ogre, OGF (Our Great Friend), the Emperor, or the General, is kept under very commodious house arrest in a guesthouse of the Balcombe residence, the Briars. There, an affinity grows between him and Betsy, nurtured by reciprocal childish pranks and a mutual interest in horsemanship. With a small French entourage and a brimming larder supplied by the East India Company, Napoleon maintains a semblance of court life. The plot drags, though, as the book details Betsys growing pains. Gradually she becomes aware of male suitors and also of her superior attractiveness vis--vis her long-suffering older sister, Jane. Her incipient womanhood threatens her cherished identity as a hellion, and shes disillusioned when a resentful admirer tells her that Napoleon was overheard extolling her feminine charms. There are far deeper disillusionments and betrayals to come. St. Helenas new British governor, Sir Hudson Lowe (in Name and Nature, as he is dubbed by Betsy) arrives determined to make sure that Napoleons exile more closely resembles jail. The strictures he places on the emperor and his ruinous allegations against William Balcombe for befriending him bring about the novels dispiriting and attenuated denouement. The faux regency prose is convincing without being unduly daunting. Clearly, Keneallys sympathies lie firmly with Napoleon and the Balcombes, as will the readers.

      COPYRIGHT(2016) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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