Carefully argued and splendidly entertaining.
- Tony Barber, Financial Times
Written in a classic, limpid, and lively style, this remarkable book is the result of decades of reading and thinking by a pure historian. Patrice Gueniffey is one of the world’s leading specialists of the French Revolution and of Napoleon’s life, meteoric career, and legacy. Strikingly, such a deep and extensive competence extends to Charles de Gaulle’s time, politico-military career, and memory as well. With the aid of the two formidable figures of Napoleon and de Gaulle, Gueniffey endeavors to analyze why great men hold such a powerful position in history.
- Guillaume Piketty, Sciences Po, Paris,
This book will become a landmark…In Napoleon and de Gaulle, Patrice Gueniffey compares the fates of these ‘two French heroes.’ [He] does not stop at the fascinating relationship of these two men with politics and war. In an admirably fluid and clear style, he delves rigorously and methodically into the twists and turns of these two men’s lives: their formative years as soldiers, their forced exiles, their triumphant ‘returns,’ their bitter departures.
- Jean-Christophe Buisson, Le Figaro Magazine
Gueniffey has produced a masterful work. The French historian knows how to admire without succumbing to hagiography, and to compare without conflating differences…Not since François Furet has France seen a historian so gifted and alert to the issues that matter. Furet thought that the age of heroism was perhaps behind us. But after reading Gueniffey’s sparkling book, it is wise to bet on the endurance of heroes and heroism.
- Daniel J. Mahoney, City Journal
In this erudite book, Patrice Gueniffey has had the interesting idea of comparing the careers and the myths of these two legendary figures. And there is a nice symmetry to their stories.
- Julian Jackson, The Spectator
Illuminating…showing why the French are drawn time and again to ‘great men’ (and the odd slip of a saint). The heady, lordly prose reminds me of Carlyle—or superior fiction.
Australian Book Review
As brilliant as it is powerful…This is both a work of history and a bleak criticism of our present times. Superbly written, it’s a pessimistic and sarcastic book and is, for that very reason, uplifting.
- Marc Riglet, Lire
The author…writes remarkably well…A fascinating exercise of political, military, personal comparisons.
- Maurice Szafran, Challenges
This book does not limit itself to the kind of banal comparison that is so often sketched between these two French heroes. Through his sharp analysis, [Gueniffey] attempts to offer a political portrait of [France], which…has not yet come to terms with having cut off the head of its king.
- Jacques de Saint Victor, Le Figaro
A book about the forceful power of will in history…[A] lively, discerning study.
Library Journal (starred review)
[Gueniffey is] brilliant and erudite…capable of startling insights.
- Peter McPhee, Australian Book Review
A wide-ranging historical essay on history, heroes, and how they shaped the events of their times…Gueniffey pulls no punches in his perceptive and wide-ranging book…This book is not an ode to despair. It is rather an appreciation of the imaginative aspect of history to move men and women to acts of greatness.
- Patrick J. Walsh, Chronicles
[Gueniffey] does not offer anything like traditional biographies. Instead, in five essayistic chapters he weaves back and forth between different elements of the two men’s careers, touching on themes such as their seizures of power, their exiles, their military thinking, their writing, and their final resting places.
- David A. Bell, Journal of Modern History