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Napoleon Wrote Fiction (1972)

by Napoleon I

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"Dear Lt. Buonaparte,
I note that you do have a great love of our beautiful tongue, especially for one raised in an area where a proper education in writing French must have been hard to come by. You efforts to create pleasing tales, I hope, brought to a greater understanding and respect for the giants of our literary past. However, I regret that the material submitted to our press do not meet with our present projected line of books for the Christmas season of 1787. Perhaps another printer will find your stories more to their tastes.
Regretfully, Etienne Laroche."
After reading Mr. Frayling's work my mind came up with the above possible rejection letter from a fictitious printer. It's the least I could do, since it must have taken a great deal of work on Mr. Frayling's part to come up with Napoleon's juvenilia, and get a publisher to go for it. C.S. Forester remarked that the average publisher has to have at least one book on Napoleon for the Christmas line every year. This could well have been one of them. Still, it was fun to read. I wonder if anyone ever quotes from these when doing interior dialogue for Napoleon in a novel? ( )
  DinadansFriend | Sep 23, 2013 |
Not only did this book have the writings of Napoleon, it also contained excellent introductions to each chapter that set the tone & explained the circumstances that influenced Napoleon to write what he did during the specified periods. Several times I have read the musings of Napoleon on the subject of suicide, which were written after his having read Goethe’s The Sorrows of Young Werther. Several times I have read of Napoleon’s encounter with the prostitute, but I had never been aware that he had written the actual dialogue [for a Meeting at the Palais Royal.]
The Mask of the Prophet was a most interesting tale.
Clisson & Eugenie was a sublime piece, although I preferred the original draft (again written a la Goethe & Rousseau), which Napoleon spurned himself in his later years. It also had the distinction of not “falling apart at the end”; a flaw noted by Frayling himself at the very beginning of the text. It is a problem I have myself when writing. Perhaps because one can easily write of events past because we know from experience what to expect, but to write of what is going to happen… but our own fate we have little control over, thus how can we guess the fate of others?
Napoleon must have been very self-obsessed to write this story as there is no question at all that he was writing about himself [as Clisson], though I have my doubts of whom he was thinking of when he created Eugenie. If it had been Desiree Clary, why did he make Eugenie come to love another, when in reality it was he who had broken off with her? Per Frayling, it is possible that he had based the character on her sister Julie, instead. ( )
  TheCelticSelkie | Nov 15, 2006 |
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Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Napoleon Iprimary authorall editionscalculated
Frayling, ChristopherEditorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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For my parents, and for Anne
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In his memoirs, written of St. Helena, Napoleon begins his first chapter with a survey of the history and achievements of the Tuscan branch of the Bonaparte family.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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