| 1812: The Great Retreat tells the story of the end of the
    most famously disastrous campaign in history, using the words of the survivors to describe their desperate withdrawal from Russia. Napoleon's campaign had
    begun with more than a
 third of a million men setting out on what was to be a long and terrible march to the
    glittering city of Moscow. Only
 100,000 were to reach it. Forced to turn back in the face of winter's onset, almost
    nothing of the drastically reduced army
 lived to recross the Niemen River.
   The author's previous books on the
    campaign - 1812: The Mardi on Moscow and 1812: Napoleon in Moscow - broughtthe Grand Army to the head-on battle at Malo-Jaroslavetz after withdrawing sixty miles
    from the burntdown capital, and
 for the first time in his meteoric career Napoleon had to order a retreat. 1812: The Great
    Retreat follows the army's
 withdrawal through 800 miles of devastated countryside, crossing the horrific relics of
    the Borodino battlefield, fighting
 its way through the Russian General Kutusov's successive attempts to cut it off, and
    winning, against overwhelming
 odds, the three-day battle of the Berezina crossing. First-hand narratives, many published
    in English for the first time,
 describe Marshal Ney's astounding achievement in holding together the rearguard until he
    himself, musket in hand, was
 the last man to rccross the Niemen into Poland.
 
 Using the words of 160 of the participants themselves, Paul Britten Austin brings
    unparalleled authenticity and
 immediacy to his unique account of the end of Napoleon's dramatic and tragic 1812
    campaign.
 
 
 KEY POINTS:
 
 Epic story of the end of Napoleon's 1812 campaign
 
 Many participants' accounts in English for the first time
 
 Self-contained final book in a highly applauded trilogy on the campaign
 
 
 
 REVIEWS:
 
 '...Already heralded as a classic... The text is enriched with first-hand accounts which
    bring the whole narrative to life
 with an air of stark realism... Britten Austin's account of the army's withdrawal from
    Moscow is compelling. It is alive
 with detail and colour that tells of the disorganised exodus in which food and provisions
    were abandoned in preference
 to plunder ... The author spares us none of the horror. Some first-hand accounts are
    gruesome in the extreme, vividly
 telling of this ill-fated army in full retreat... Britten Austin's trilogy truly ranks as
    a masterpiece, representing all that is to
 be admired in a research based work. Thoroughly readable, the lively text fully conveys
    the magnitude and drama of the
 events of 1812.' - John S. White, Waterloo Journal
 
 '...Napoleon's 1812 campaign in Russia, the turning point of the Napoleonic Wars, has
    finally found its best
 chronicler...Austin shoots his entire tale almost entirely in the literary equivalent of
    maximum close-up, using numerous,
 lengthy narratives...For Napoleonic history in general and the 1812 campaign in
    particular, this is as good as it gets.' - Ian
 Thompson's Military Bookshelf, Daily Republic
 
 '...Vivid and compelling...The most detailed account of the disaster yet to become
    available in English.' - Dr Charles
 Esdaile, University of Liverpool, R.U.S.I. Journal
 
 '...A splendid close to a splendid trilogy.' - Military Modelling
 
 AUTHOR NOTES:
 
 Paul Britten Austin has written many books on a variety of subjects, both in English and
    in Swedish. He holds an
 honorary D.Litt and a Swedish knighthood of the Order of the North Star. His three books
    on the 1812 campaign arc the
 result of twenty-five years of research, and together constitute his magnum opus.
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