An absolutely excellent book. Every bit is beautifully judged
- William Leith, Evening Standard
Sweeping, thrilling and psychologically acute, this second volume in John Sugden’s biography will hardly be bettered...this book is a monumental achievement. Some readers may be daunted by its length, but the investment of time and effort is unquestionably worth it... It is a tribute to Sugden’s skill that as Nelson lies stricken below desks, gasping for air, blood pouring into his chest, his officers biting back the tears and Hardy desperately wringing his hand, you pray that somehow, against all sense and reason, England’s greatest hero might just pull through
- Dominic Sandbrook, Sunday Times
The Last eight years of his [Nelson’s] life dealt with in thrilling, monumental detail
Sunday Times
There isn’t the slightest hint of modishness in Sugden’s study, which not only has all the old-fashioned scholarly virtues but is also, in the time-honoured tradition of naval history, a thumping good read
Scotsman
John Sugden’s utterly epic <i>Nelson: The Sword of Albion </i>is the longest, richest, most absorbing biography I’ve ever read… Sugden’s book is of Tolstoyan dimensions
- Roger Lewis, Daily Mail
A superb biography
- Andrew Roberts, Sunday Telegraph
An authoritative account of Nelson’s dramatic naval and personal life... In prose of admiral clarity Sugden binds together the strategy, tactics and of course battles, with powerful evocations of their tumult and horror, into lively narrative
- Robert Steward, Spectator
John Sugden has written a splendid book about this great Christian warrior
- Paul Johnson, Tablet
A good read
- Paul Johnson, Spectator
Meticulous in its coverage, acute in its psychological assessments, and gripping in its accounts of his game-changing victories
- Andrew Holgate, Sunday Times
The Sword of Albion concludes the most comprehensive and intimate life of Nelson ever written, one that teems with a glittering array of sailors and civilians, heroes and villains, husbands, wives and lovers.
Here are Nelson's famous victories at the battles of the Nile, Copenhagen and Trafalgar as well as his lesser-known yet equally gripping campaigns. But behind the military prowess is a man riven with paradoxes and schisms: the fighting admiral and the glory-hunter, the national hero and the indigent commoner, the family man and the adulterer.
This is an epic, triumphant and tragic life, and a masterpiece of the biographer's art.