Sunday, January 1, 2017

Read 2 Review - Napoleon's Rosebud by Humphry Knipe

Napoleon's RosebudNapoleon's Rosebud
April 26th 2016
Historical Realistic Fiction


The Book Junkie Reads . . .  Review of . . . NAPOLEON’S ROSEBUD . . . In the beginning, I thought I would pick this up and begin to read it right away. Well, I started but did not finish it as quickly as I would have liked or anticipated. Napoleon was not a favorite to the history of France. I love France. But it was his portrayal throughout the various recounting of his place in history that left a bitter taste in my mouth. Its time that I move on to the topic at hand. The beauty from remote island.

Napoleon's Rosebub was beautiful in deed, sweet and perfect to set in motion a plan. This was the more than just her encounter with Napoleon. The beauty with nothing to offer gets an adventure of a lifetime thrust upon her because she caught the eye of a once powerful man. She moves on to meet some important people of her time and have adventures. It must have been such a life to be able to share some rich stories with her family as time went on.

The story was beautifully written with key elements that would make you want to believe that you could see these event unfolding before you. Thank you, Humphrey for sharing your family's tales.


BLURB
You are the high spirited 19-year-old daughter of a penniless widow, born and brought up on an isolated, windswept South Atlantic island, a girl with virtually no prospects, when out of the blue the most famous man on earth falls into your lap.

Still smarting from his defeat at Waterloo, still the hero of Liberals everywhere, Napoleon has been exiled to tiny Saint Helena because it is the remotest and most easily defended island in the British Empire. But far from being broken by defeat, Napoleon’s fertile imagination seethes with escape schemes. He meets you on his first evening on the island and instantly knows he has found what he is looking for: someone to set him free.

Nicknaming you "Rosebud" he sends you to Europe with a secret message for Lord Byron, an ardent supporter. You escape the notorious poet’s clutches just in time to get involved in a madcap scheme to rescue Napoleon by submarine, a new-fangled American invention. Then you return home to give him his final victory.

This clandestine affair between an imprisoned emperor and the island girl who tries to set him free has a very personal backstory, writes the author. When he was a child back home in South Africa his grandfather, who emigrated from Saint Helena in the late 1880’s, often spoke about his family’s acquaintance with the great man. A big print of Napoleon hung on his living room wall. “Remember that we have been touched by greatness,” were his enigmatic last words.


When he researched this claim many years later and discovered the Rosebud legend he realized why his grandfather, a Victorian gentleman, hadn’t gone into detail. Charlotte Knipe, said to be the most beautiful girl on Saint Helena at the time, is on record as having been a frequent guest of the emperor and rumored to have been his lover. Rosebud is the author’s great-great-grandaunt. The “touch of greatness” was Napoleon’s.
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