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As the 19th century progressed, England's little wars shifted more toward Africa; war correspondents, for whom Farwell seems to share the military's dislike, became more common; the conflicts became costlier and harder to win. This is a light, sometimes frivolous, but generally informative sampling of the innumerable battles fought in the service of the Empire. The book has a rather subjective sense of proportion, mixing up little wars with big ones, then treating the latter via marginal anecdotes, e.g., the Crimean War is rendered through the exploits of an officer's wife. Farwell makes able use of primary and secondary sources, and his tone alternates between gentle irony and sincere enthusiasm for military glory. His biases are frank (against Gladstone, for instance), and he relegates General Gordon to the briefest possible space, while chronicling the adventures of Wolseley at extreme length. The geography ranges from Canada to Burma, and the character of the engagements from the horrors of the 1857 Mutiny in India to the administrative accomplishments of Warburton, ""warden of the Kyber."" Successful adventure.
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Previews available in: English
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Queen Victoria's little wars
1985, Norton, W. W. Norton & Company
in English
0393302350 9780393302356
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Queen Victoria's little wars.
1972, Harper & Row
in English
- [1st U.S. ed.]
0060112220 9780060112226
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Queen Victoria's Little Wars
1972, Harper & Row
Hardback
in English
- [1st U.S. ed.]
0060112220 9780060112226
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