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Berezina

On Three Wheels from Moscow to Paris Chasing Napoleon's Epic Fail

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available
"Hilarious, introspective, contemplative, professorial . . . the tale of a historical motorcycle tour quite unlike most any you will ever read." —Ultimate Motorcycling
Lire Magazine Best Travel Book
Take four friends, put them on two Ural motorcycles (complete with sidecars), send them off on a 2,500-mile odyssey retracing history's most famous retreat, add what some might consider an excessive amount of Vodka, and you've got Sylvain Tesson's Berezina, a riotous and erudite book that combines travel, history, comradery, and adventure.
The retreat of Napoleon's Grande Armée from Russia culminated, after a humiliating loss, with the crossing of the River Berezina, a word that henceforth became synonymous with unmitigated disaster for the French and national pride for the Russians. Two hundred years after this battle, Sylvain Tesson and his friends retrace Napoleon's retreat, along the way reflecting on the lessons of history, the meaning of defeat, and the realities of contemporary Europe. A great read for history buffs and for anyone who has ever dreamed of an adventure that is out of the ordinary.
"Wonderfully mad." —The Times
"The narration is wry and marked by a cheerful fatalism. Mr. Tesson is a witty and knowledgeable road companion." —The Wall Street Journal
"From beginning to end, the story of Berezina is enthralling, funny, and terrifying. At the same time, it is magnificently written." —RTL
"Berezina succeeds brilliantly as a sly commentary on—and a challenge to conventional thinking about—today's contention between Russia and the EU, and the rutted habits of the popular Western mind." —On the Seawall
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    • Kirkus

      September 15, 2019
      French travel writer Tesson chronicles his journey following the route of Napoleon's 1812 retreat from Moscow to Paris--200 years later, on motorcycle, in winter. The two weeks documented here represent an adventure, pilgrimage, and challenge against the elements and the weight of history. In 2012, the author and a small group of friends decided to brave the elements of ice and snow on two motorcycles with sidecars, duplicating the route that, two centuries earlier, had been littered with corpses from the well-documented retreat of Napoleon, a "paradox, unique in Human History: an army marched, from victory to victory, toward its total annihilation!" Over the course of the text, Tesson evokes War and Peace, various historical accounts, and Napoleon's own grandiose confessions, alternating with the contemporary account of following Napoleon's tragic route. But why? "For the sheer glory of it." There was much camaraderie on the trip but little glory, as the journey culminated less in triumph than in relief; ultimately, the dangers encountered and the historical horrors conjured hardly seemed worth the risk. As the author notes at one point, "doubt was worming its way into me: what the hell was I doing on a Ural [motorcycle] in the middle of December, with two fools in tow, when these damn machines are made to transport small, 90-pound Ukrainian women from Yalta beach to Simferopol on a summer afternoon?" Yet the meditative aspects of braving the elements on motorcycle offered time to reflect on the enduring legacy of the Franco-Russian conflict on both nations and the rest of the world, the visions that drove Napoleon to his death, and the differences in character between the Russians--in the era after Communism and the Soviet Union--and the French. Both the writer and the reader feel like they've really been through something when the journey is done and Tesson concludes, "I suddenly felt like going home, taking a shower, and washing off all those horrors." A brief travelogue that bridges and comingles past and present.

      COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      September 15, 2019
      In 1812, Napoleon Bonaparte, with a considerably diminished Grand Arm�e, crossed the Berezina River in retreat from a failed attempt to invade and conquer the Russian Empire. Two hundred years later, French travel writer Tesson (The Consolations of the Forest, 2011), while on a book tour in Moscow, decided to retrace and commemorate the tragic retreat from Moscow to Paris. Tesson enlists a small band of friends, two Frenchmen and two Russians, to join him in his compulsive desire to follow the ghostly footsteps of his ancestral countrymen back home to Paris by riding in the bitter December cold on Ural motorcycles with sidecars. Fortunately, his fellow travelers share both Tesson's hubris and enthusiasm for the campaign that brought the French Emperor his first military failure and Russia its first taste of nationalistic pride. Tesson balances the constant struggles and pitfalls of this two-week motorized trek with excerpts from letters and other archival materials. His insights into today's landscape, scarred by two world wars, are equally compelling. This is Tesson's second work translated into English and the incursion is off to a promising start.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)

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