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La Belle France: A Short History

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Click here to buy  La Belle France: A Short History  by Alistair Horne. La Belle France: A Short History
by Alistair Horne
Sales Rank: 362863
0.0 out of 5 stars
$6.00
At Amazon
on 6-16-2008.
Buy  La Belle France: A Short History  now! Get Info on  La Belle France: A Short History
Features
  • Cover Type: Hard Cover with 512 pages
  • Published by: Knopf August 23, 2005
  • Written in: English
  • ISBN 10 Number: 1400041406
  • ISBN 13 Number: 978-1400041404
  • Book Dimensions: 9.5 x 6.4 x 1.7 inches
  • Weighs: 2.1 pounds

    From Publishers Weekly
    If this "sister work" of Horne's delightful Seven Ages of Paris is "the culmination of some four decades of a love affair with France," the relationship between author and mistress shows no signs of waning. Horne takes his lover's story from the "yobbish louts" of the sixth-century Merovingian dynasty to the career of François Mitterrand and his "liaisons dangereuses" (both political and private). The author fondly delves into a drawerful of narratives, historical snapshots and personal anecdotes, but lovers' quarrels resurface in entertainingly brusque judgments and occasional character assassinations. Valéry Giscard D'Estaing and Jean-Paul Sartre inspire some particularly choice language: "If there was ever a philosopher guilty of the sin Socrates was accused of, being a false corrupter of youth, Sartre seemed to be it." He smelled, says Horne, like a goat, a quality he apparently shared with Henri IV, whom the author conversely admires as a statesman. It's the compellingly subjective treatment of modern France, and the irreverent appraisal of its icons, that makes this book so worth reading. While Horne's medieval and early modern chapters are swift but superficial, the book's second half is reflective and charming. Horne's moving account of the dilemmas of resistance and collaboration under Nazi occupation and the vindictive purification that followed is an emotional climax. 24 pages of color illus., not seen by PW; 4 maps. (Aug. 25)
    Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

    From Booklist
    Readers with a working knowledge of, and keen appreciation for, European history will attest to the fact that the history of France is one of the richest national histories on the Continent. Those readers will find great support for their interest in this account, which is comprehensive in coverage, fluid in presentation, and rendered in sprightly language. In addition, any reader who is hoping to attain a working knowledge of the subject will find embraceable edification here. As political correctness has taught us in recent years, history is not made up exclusively of the actions and exploits of a country's leaders. That acknowledged, the history of France is nevertheless blessed--for the reader, at least--with a long line of electric personalities who have controlled the destiny of la belle France, among them Charlemagne, Catherine de Medici, Louis XIV, Napoleons I and III, and Charles de Gaulle. This compelling narrative belongs in any public library needing an excellent, current one-volume history of France. Brad Hooper
    Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

    Reader Reviews
    I hate to write a bad review about a book written by someone as famous and published as Alistair Horne, but so many of the reviews written thus far have been so over-the-top with praise that I have to say something. Horne has written books on France under Napoleon, the First and Second World War, the Franco-Prussian War of 1870-71, and the Algerian War in the 20th century. However, he has not written books on the early history of France (before Napoleon) which is where I made my studies in grad school. Whenever I read a book of history like this, I look at the sections on what I know. If the author does a good job there, then I figure the author is doing a good job elsewhere where I know less. In this case, to select one chapter, the one on Louis XIV, Horne makes too many mistakes to be taken seriously. Either his research team didn't do their job right or he did not know that he was relying on bad secondary works. Thus, he ends up repeating past mistakes. A non-comprehensive list of errors in one chapter: page 153 Louis XVI was Louis XIV's great-great-GREAT grandson, one more generation separated the two men. page 165 in 1709 Louis XIV's former mistress died (Madame de Montespan) but he did not lose her, as Horne says, because when he was told about it, the king said she had been dead to him for years. She had not lived at court since 1690. same page There is a whole paragraph on the Peace of Utrecht, Marlborough's intervention in Europe, the undoing of Colbert's achievements, and the loss in the value of the French livre between 1683 and 1713 that requires more explanation than I have space. To select one issue, the livre lost value, not because of France's defeats, but because of the policies of Colbert's successors who devalued the coinage and currency several times between 1683 and the Peace of Utrecht. That means they reduced the amount of gold and silver in the coinage. page 166 Madame de Maintenon, or Scarron as Horne calls her, played absolutely no role in the revocation of toleration for the Huguenot. Research has proven this. page 167 Horne has confused Frederick I of Prussia with Frederick II the Great who was not born while Louis XIV was alive. page 168 Horne attributes a poor harvest to the suffering of the poor without saying that the harvest was caused by one of the worst winters in French history that was responsible for killing five percent of the population (one million people). page 169 In describing the King's day, he fails to mention that, after 1690, Louis XIV put in longer days working at governing France. He stopped attending the balls, operas, and parties that went on at Versailles. Instead, he worked in the evenings with his ministers. Versailles became deadly dull. page 170 The Dauphine, Louis's daughter-in-law, is said to have died after giving birth to Louis' first grandson, the Duc de Bourgogne. Funny, she had two more sons after she died, I guess. same page Horne has the King say, in 1700 after his second grandson, whose mother according to Horne died before he was born, became King Philip V of Spain, that, "The Pyrenees are no more." Unfortunately, Louis XIV did not say that. The Spanish Ambassador did. Same page Horne says the thermometer fell below -21 degrees F. What thermometer? No such instrument existed in 1709. Neither did Fahrenheit as a scale. The temperature fell below -21 degrees Fahrenheit as we measure temperature today. Perhaps this is an author's shorthand, but... Page 171 has a paragraph on deaths in the royal family. Horne describes the eldest grandson, the Duc de Bourgogne (the one whose mother died shortly after his birth) as a hard worker with the King's affections. In reality, the grandson was a timid religiously narrow man who had lost the Battle of Oudenarde in 1708 and embarrassed the royal family doing so. Louis XIV never gave him another command. Horne is reflecting the opinion of one faction at court, not the King's opinion. In any case, Horne says he died in 1712 as the Allies were threatening Versailles. Actually, in 1712 the English deserted the Allies and France was able to turn the tide defeating them at Denain to gain some advantage at the negotiating table. I guess mentioning the English desertion of their allies in a history of France would not be right. Enough recounting the errors in one chapter. How many errors do you have to have before they become too many? I cannot recommend this book to anyone based on this one chapter. It is not a good book. And I have to confess that I stopped reading after this chapter. I had read everything up to that chapter. Maybe it got better, but I don't have the patience to read bad books. My time is too limited. I will say that Horne does describe the importance of the Battle of Bouvines in 1214 that forced King John of England to seek higher taxes leading to the confrontation with his barons and Magna Carta in 1215. For that alone, I gave this book two stars instead of one. Many English historians fail to consider the impact of foreign events on their country's history. The title of this book when it was published in England was "Friend or Foe: An Anglo-Saxon Looks at French History." Comment (1) | | (Report this)


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