A short and vivid biography, which deconstructs the Napoleonic myth and reveals the reality of his rule. Written with great wit and panache, this biography also has a serious purpose: to make us face up to the moral bankruptcy of Napoleon's dictatorship.
Johnson tells the whole story:
- his astonishing gift for figures and calculation, his mastery of cannon;
- his audacious, hyperactive and aggressive generalship and his simple battle tactics;
- his complete control of propaganda and the success of the cultural presentation of the Empire;
- the Code Napoleon;
- his failure as an international statesman, as Europe grew to hate him;
- his marshals and ministers;
- his wives, mistresses, personal style and working methods;
- the British blockade and the Continental System;
- the mistakes in Spain and Russia.
The escape from Elba, the events leading up to Waterloo and the battle itself, which gets a full treatment, is particularly riveting.