Exploits and Adventures of Brigadier Gerard

by Arthur Conan Doyle

Other authorsGeorge Macdonald Fraser (Introduction)
Paperback, 2001

Status

Available

Call number

823.8

Collection

Publication

NYRB Classics (2001), Paperback, 417 pages

Description

There is no braver officer in Napoleon's cavalry than étienne Gerard - especially in his own opinion. Whether kidnapped by gangs of brigands or outnumbered by enemy troops, the plucky little soldier is constantly gallant, chivalrous and ready to face any danger, even if he doesn't always think before he acts. With great gusto Gerard recounts the swashbuckling exploits and adventures of his glittering military career - carrying out secret missions for Napoleon, eluding capture by the Duke of Wellington, making a daring break from an English prison, rescuing ladies in distress, duelling to the death against the dastardly Baron Straubenthal and even saving the day at the Battle of Waterloo.

User reviews

LibraryThing member dougwood57
The success of the Sherlock Holmes stories has overshadowed the fact that Sir Arthur Conan Doyle wrote many other stories of entirely different character. The New York Review of Books Classics has brought the `Exploits and Adventures of Brigadier Gerard' back to life. The Gerard character is said
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to be Conan Doyle's second best fictional invention.

The eight `Exploits' stories were published between 1894 and 1895 while the ten `Adventures' were published after a five year hiatus between 1900 and 1903. Like the Holmes tales, these pieces were published as serials in The Strand Magazine. Once again we owe a debt of happy gratitude to the NYRB for reviving this quirky, funny, heroic series of adventure tales.

The eponymous Gerard is one Etienne Gerard, a Hussar (a light cavalryman) in the French Army during the Napoleonic Wars. In other words, a character about as far removed from the dyspeptic intellectual detective of Baker Street as one can imagine. In the excellent introduction (one of the hallmarks of the NYRB Classics series), George Macdonald Fraser remarks on the courage Conan Doyle showed in showcasing a French hero fighting against the British less than 80 years after Napoleon was finally defeated (As Fraser notes "even today [the French ] are not notably popular north of the Channel"). Quite a feat of imagination.

Like Harry Flashman (Flashman: A Novel (Flashman)) and the lesser known Otto Prohaska (A Sailor of Austria: In Which, Without Really Intending to, Otto Prohaska Becomes Official War Hero No. 27 of the Habsburg Empire (The Otto Prohaska Novels)), Gerard is in his old age when he spins his stories to the reader. Gerard boasts that he is the greatest swordsman, horseman, and lover as well as the most loyal servant of Napoleon in the entire French army. And Conan Doyle permits Gerard to excel in all these measures and yet his excessive pride makes him obtuse. As Fraser put it Gerard is "vain, touchy, obstinate, reckless, boastful, and none too bright." He is entirely ingenuous, which repeatedly leads him to trouble and then he must slash his sword and dash away on his horse to escape. Gerard is charmingly unaware that he is a strutting French peacock; he assumes that others should and do recognize his exceptional qualities. Coming from a more self-aware man such cocksureness would be intolerable conceit.

I titled this review "What Would Harry Flashman Make of Etienne Gerard?" That's a fun question to speculate about. It would take a new Sir Arthur Conan Doyle or Sir George MacDonald Fraser to do it justice. My guess is Harry would laugh up his sleeve at Gerard until he saw Etienne's sword swinging dangerously toward his head. For his part, I expect Gerard would be blissfully unaware of Flashman's disdain, but might he also detect Harry's certain 'shyness'?

The `Exploits and Adventures of Brigadier Gerard' are wonderful entertainments. Like the Sherlock Holmes stories, the pity is there are so few of them. Highest recommendation.
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LibraryThing member lmichet
Best book I've read in a very long time, I have to say. Gerard is an absolutely appealing character and his transparently misguided narration is pretty much brilliant. It's difficult to pull off a story which has the narrator living, through his own words, in a state of enlightenment significantly
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lower than that of the reader, and to keep him charming-- but Conan Doyle does that, and he does that seventeen times. Everyone with even the vaguest interest in Napoleonic history, Sherlock Holmes, or France should make this a top priority-- everyone else should put it pretty near to the top. The fox-hunting episode is fantastic, as is the one about the nine Prussian horsemen: pretty much every single one is exciting, funny, and well-paced, and every bit as lovable as a good Holmes. Seek this one out.
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LibraryThing member abbottthomas
This book was one of Philip Pullman's top 40 books for Waterstones and I am grateful for the pointer to a work which had inexplicably passed me by. The stories of Etienne Gerard's adventures in Napoleon's army are told from the viewpoint of old age and lubricated by wine of varying quality donated
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by the listeners. If half of what Gerard tells us is true, he is undoubtedly a skilful swordsman, a great horseman and a successful womaniser. It is impossible to question his courage, although his actions not infrequently remove him from serious danger. His insight is near non-existent, both in respect of his own actions and in what others think of him, but in spite of this he seems to be well liked by most who are involved with him.

It is good to see the Napoleonic wars from the other side for a change but, perhaps because the stories were written by a very English writer, Gerard comes over with rather British attitudes (with major exceptions over cricket and fox-hunting).

The stories themselves tend to turn around a single, and sometimes predictable, plot device but are pacy and to the point. Conan Doyle is comfortable with short stories and these, while inevitably overshadowed by Holmes and Watson, are undemanding entertainment well worth investigating.
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LibraryThing member peegee
Gerard is a fantastic character. I love the mix of humour and adventure here. Personally, I would happily have settled for fewer Sherlock Holmes stories in exchange for a few more of Gerard.

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1894-1895: The Exploits of Brigadier Gerard (8 stories)
1900-1903: The Adventures of Gerard (9 stories)
1910: The Marriage of the Brigadier

Physical description

417 p.; 8.15 inches

ISBN

0940322730 / 9780940322738
Page: 0.2295 seconds