2011

Fondation Napoléon

Yesterday, we met with Professor Peter Hicks, historian and international director of the Fondation Napoléon, here in Paris.  He generously gave me many suggestions for books and sources I might pursue, particularly about Napoleon’s youth.  The Fondation maintains an extremely useful website at www.napoleon.org and Professor Hicks publishes their electronic newsletter.  Both are available in […]

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Chateau de Fontainebleau

Fontainebleau!  Home to French kings for eight centuries, Napoleon spent vast sums to restore it, initially to house the pope whom he’d coerced into attending his 1804 coronation (only to crown himself rather than allowing the pope to do it).  Years later, Emperor Napoleon imprisoned that same pope within its walls for eighteen months until

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Ecole Militaire, Brienne

In 1779, nine-year-old Napoleon arrived at military school in Brienne.  Barely speaking French in a heavy Corsican accent, he faced five years of isolation, austerity and mockery.  Yet, despite his ardent Corsican nationalism, it was here he became a Frenchman.  He also became an impassioned reader of history, devouring Plutarch’s Lives and demanding access to

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Napoleon’s Tomb

Yesterday was our first day in Paris.  After settling into our apartment on Rue Bonaparte a few blocks from the Seine, we walked to Les Invalides, Napoleon I’s burial site.  During the mile-long walk, I was reminded that the truism about Parisians having style is remarkably true.  Trim women gracefully navigate cobblestones on spiked heels,

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Personal Details

As a writer, especially a fiction writer, I collect details and search for interesting, memorable ways to describe them.  My quest to capture the essence of Napoleon requires recreating, first in my mind and then in my readers’ imaginations, a sense of his everyday life.  For example, when he got out of bed, did his

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Scholars

The breadth of Napoleonic material amazes and at times overwhelms me.  Of course, its volume results from the huge impact he had in so many physical, political and cultural areas of the world, but I am grateful to the multitude of scholars who have painstakingly recorded the details, both small and large. I’m not a

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Why Napoleon Bonaparte?

He is the epitome of France, yet he didn’t speak French until he was nine.   The second son of minor, impoverished Corsican nobility, he attended military school on the French king’s sou.  By age thirty, he had supplanted that monarch as France’s ruler. He faced battle fearlessly but could be petulant over a slight head

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