Alexandre Chatrian / Emile Erckmann / Erckmann-Chatrian
Told through the eyes of a French soldier, Waterloo vividly recounts one of history’s most decisive battles. Erckmann-Chatrian blend meticulous historical detail with personal drama, capturing the fear, courage, and devastation of war. As Napoleon’s dreams shatter on the battlefield, this gripping novel offers a poignant look at the soldiers who lived-and died-through history’s turning point.Erckmann-Chatrian was the name used by French authors Emile Erckmann (1822-1899) and Alexandre Chatrian (1826-1890), nearly all of whose works were jointly written. Both Erckmann and Chatrian were born in the departement of Moselle, in the Lorraine region in the extreme north-east of France. They specialised in military fiction and ghost stories in a rustic mode, applying to the Vosges mountain range and the Alsace-Lorraine region techniques inspired by story-tellers from the Black Forest. Lifelong friends who first met in the spring of 1847, they finally quarreled during the mid-1880s, after which they did not produce any more stories jointly. During 1890 Chatrian died, and Erckmann wrote a few pieces under his own name. Many of Erckmann-Chatrian’s works were translated into English by Adrian Ross.