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Nelson: Love & Fame

Nelson: Love & Fame

List Price: $35.00
Your Price: $23.10
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: More on Nelson as a man and lover than as a warrior
Review: Even so, the book is very good and will be a nice addition to your library. My thoughts are that this book is for someone who knows nothing or little about Horatio Lord Nelson. Whereas the Nelson fan will already have read all the contents elsewhere the novice will find this a very useful single-volume overview. I strongly recommend it for those readers.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A good book
Review: I agree with the last reviewer that Joel Hayward's book "FOR GOD AND GLORY" is much better than this book in terms of assessing Lord Nelson as a naval warrior and military commander. Hayward's book is an instant classic! It will be much discussed by Nelson enthusiasts for years to come. Buy it!

But that should not detract from a positive review of this book by Edgar Vincent, which is a more traditional biographical-type book that is very well done. Vincent does a very nice job indeed of narrating Lord Neloson's life and romances. He adds little to what we already know, that is true, but he nonetheless writes with such flair that even the well-known story seems fresh and entertaining.

This book, if a comparison needs to be made, is better than Christopher Hibbert's, and is written with more fluency than Oman's classic biography. I rate it highly.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A good book
Review: I agree with the last reviewer that Joel Hayward's book "FOR GOD AND GLORY" is much better than this book in terms of assessing Lord Nelson as a naval warrior and military commander. Hayward's book is an instant classic! It will be much discussed by Nelson enthusiasts for years to come. Buy it!

But that should not detract from a positive review of this book by Edgar Vincent, which is a more traditional biographical-type book that is very well done. Vincent does a very nice job indeed of narrating Lord Neloson's life and romances. He adds little to what we already know, that is true, but he nonetheless writes with such flair that even the well-known story seems fresh and entertaining.

This book, if a comparison needs to be made, is better than Christopher Hibbert's, and is written with more fluency than Oman's classic biography. I rate it highly.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: YES this is a five star book
Review: I disagree with "Rheumor" (below) who thinks that we should not compare books about Lord Nelson. We can't (I can't anyway) buy EVERY book, so it is helpful to learn that this book, by Edgar Vincent, is not as good as Joel Hayward's in terms of original military analysis, but may be as good, or possibly better, in terms of narrating the admiral's entire life. Hayward's book, after all, is not strictly a biography. Vincent's is.

Isn't this a good distinction to note?

My advice is buy both because they both contain different things and both reach an outstanding standard.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: YES this is a five star book
Review: I disagree with "Rheumor" (below) who thinks that we should not compare books about Lord Nelson. We can't (I can't anyway) buy EVERY book, so it is helpful to learn that this book, by Edgar Vincent, is not as good as Joel Hayward's in terms of original military analysis, but may be as good, or possibly better, in terms of narrating the admiral's entire life. Hayward's book, after all, is not strictly a biography. Vincent's is.

Isn't this a good distinction to note?

My advice is buy both because they both contain different things and both reach an outstanding standard.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Good Analysis of Nelson's Rise to Power and Fame.
Review: In 1805, almost exactly 200 years ago, Horatio Nelson was killed just as his plans to defeat the French fleet were suceeding. Beautiful timing for a new biography that brings new light on Nelson's life.

The basics of the his life are not unknown. The interesting points addressed in this work concern things like his rise to such heights of power within the British Navy. The navy was a bastion of priveledge. The higher the social/royal ranking of a person, and the more wealth to impress one's peers the greater likelihood of promotion and power.

As the fifth son of a clergyman his rise to power had to depend on performance, fame, competance. Also there had to be hidden drives and an ability to self-promote in a manner that would not be offensive. How did Nelson rise to the top of the power pyramid? How did he get the captains of other ships, often people of higher social standing to follow his commands. The author was a senior manager at a large firm in England. He is able to analyze Nelson's life from a slightly different point of view than that of the more normal academic writer.

The result is a book that is likely to remain a classic for many years.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: a good biography about Nelson
Review: Overall this this a good biography about Nelson, however the author spends a bit too much time describing Nelson's private life. According to Vincent, Nelson was a compassionate and thoughtful leader at sea, but very immature in his relationships with women. Nelson had a difficult relationships with his first wife Fanny, and Nelson dicarded her in favor of Emma Hamilton who displayed the same childish traits as the Admiral. Vincent belives, that Nelson was never man enough to face Fanny over his infidelity since he constantly ignored Fanny's passionate appeals to rebuild the relationship. Vincent argues that Nelson decisively won the battles of St.Vincent, the Nile, and Trafalgar, but was saved at Copenhagen by the death of Tsar Paul I that led to the Danish government agreeing to British demands. One of the most interesting chapters of the book is Vincent's defense of Neslon's suppression of the rebels in Naples. Vincent states that Nelson was only just following orders from the British and Neopolitain governments and the rebel deaths were miniscule compared to those massacred by the French and their allies. I would reccomend this book to anyone who wants a book that describes Nelson's personal life but also includes his battles and the controversory about the Admiral's actions in Naples.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Russell Crowe liked it, so did my dad, a friend, &
Review: so I am reading it next.

FROM TIME MAGAZINE, Nov 2003 issue:
To play Master and Commander's Jack Aubrey, [Russell Crowe] spent months learning the violin and studying the linguistic origins of his character's accent. "But the vast majority of it is reading," he says, guiding me to a sagging bookcase. "You've got Sailing for Dummies ..." He laughs, but there it is, next to several dozen more sophisticated volumes on naval history, one of which-Nelson: Love & Fame, by Edgar Vincent-is almost in tatters. Admiral Nelson is mentioned only briefly in the film, yet Crowe highlighted and Post-it-noted the text like a grad student. "I wanted to have an intimate knowledge about Nelson," he says. "I wanted to feel the sense of him, because Jack served with him as a very young man, at least that's the legend of the fictitious character. None of this research is a burden," he adds. "I'm just inquisitive."

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Good overview and nicely produced volume.
Review: There are new works on Nelson that contain more originality--that's true. But I believe that this may be the most accessible single-volume biography and will thus probably sell well, and deservedly so, during 2005, the bicentennial of the Battle of Trafalgar. I hope so. I thoroughly enjoyed it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Excellent biography.
Review: There's no need to compare one work on Nelson to another. He's an interesting enough subject for there to have been many interesting books on his life.
This one appeals to me because it is written by someone who is neither a professional historian nor an author. It must have involved an enormous "learning curve" and then even more labor in learning the complex history. I also give Mr. Vincent credit for almost never passing moral judgment on an individual whose morals were certainly flawed (oh poor Fanny!).
In any case, it's entertaining and informative and flows quite well. Nelson is so "human", so many foibles, but he truly deserves the sobriquet "Father of Modern Royal Navy".
Large scale tactical planning as well as "modern" command and control structure were instinctive to him. So too was his ability to inspire his officers and men through bravery and a sense of justice and concern that hardly existed before his era.
All England can be proud of their hero.


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