Losing NelsonLosing Nelson
a Novel
Title rated 3.5 out of 5 stars, based on 6 ratings(6 ratings)
Book, 1999
Current format, Book, 1999, First edition in the U.S.A, All copies in use.Book, 1999
Current format, Book, 1999, First edition in the U.S.A, All copies in use. Offered in 0 more formatsEvery day, Charles Cleasby relives the events of Lord Horatio Nelson's life. He holds no regard for year-by-year chronology, so his life is a bustle of anniversaries: a political confrontation in 1797, for instance, might be followed immediately by a climactic sea battle in 1805. He reenacts the battles in his basement on a huge blue-glass table, moving the perfectly rendered ships that represent Nelson's Royal Navy and its enemies, thus reliving Nelson's triumphs.
Losing Nelson is a novel of obsession, the story of a man unable to see himself separately from the hero he mistakenly idolizes. Cleasby is, in fact, a Nelson biographer run amok. He is convinced that Nelson - Britain's greatest admiral, who finally defeated Napoleon, and lost his own life, in the Battle of Trafalgar - is the perfect hero, but in his research he has come upon an incident of horrifying brutality in Nelson's military career that simply stumps all attempts at glorification.
Further, Cleasby's new assistant, Miss Lily of Avon Secretarial Services, insists on maintaining a running criticism of Nelson as she takes dictation, not to mention the objections she voices to the isolated, sheltered way Cleasby lives his life. Something has to give, and give it does - in the most astonishing and entertaining of ways.
An obsessed biographer of Lord Horatio Nelson lives a strange existence, reenacting the military exploits of the hero in his basement, but knowledge of an act of brutality committed by the Royal Navy under Nelson's command threatens to derail his carefully constructed war game
An obsessed biographer of Lord Horatio Nelson lives a kooky existence, reenacting the military exploits of the hero in his basement, but knowledge of an act of brutality committed by the Royal Navy under his command threatens to derail his carefully constructed war game.
Losing Nelson is a novel of obsession, the story of a man unable to see himself separately from the hero he mistakenly idolizes. Cleasby is, in fact, a Nelson biographer run amok. He is convinced that Nelson - Britain's greatest admiral, who finally defeated Napoleon, and lost his own life, in the Battle of Trafalgar - is the perfect hero, but in his research he has come upon an incident of horrifying brutality in Nelson's military career that simply stumps all attempts at glorification.
Further, Cleasby's new assistant, Miss Lily of Avon Secretarial Services, insists on maintaining a running criticism of Nelson as she takes dictation, not to mention the objections she voices to the isolated, sheltered way Cleasby lives his life. Something has to give, and give it does - in the most astonishing and entertaining of ways.
An obsessed biographer of Lord Horatio Nelson lives a strange existence, reenacting the military exploits of the hero in his basement, but knowledge of an act of brutality committed by the Royal Navy under Nelson's command threatens to derail his carefully constructed war game
An obsessed biographer of Lord Horatio Nelson lives a kooky existence, reenacting the military exploits of the hero in his basement, but knowledge of an act of brutality committed by the Royal Navy under his command threatens to derail his carefully constructed war game.
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- New York : Nan A. Talese/Doubleday, c1999.
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