Feel the sweat on you forid as you march on the endless russian plains, the taste of blood in your mouth from the inhuman hardship the privates in the swedish army had to endure, some hundred years before Napoleon in the russian campain in the beginning of the eighteenth century. Mr Englund has accomplished nothing less than a extraordinary piece of living history, where he with great skill and scolarship takes the reader on the journy trough time. Through his intensive way of writing, he tends to close into the style of John Prebbel in his fine work "Culloden", but for a swedish reader it's so much more fun to live with the memory when our armies roamed Europe to defend the kingdom which used to call the Baltic sea "Mare Nostrum". The story of teh battle of Poltava is more than a thrilling text about the men who fought and died there, Mr Englund never leaves the historic perspective and afterwards, you are left with the reflection that Sweden's comming welth, was founded on the bloody soil on the Ucrainan plains. If not Czar Peter had ended the day as victor, Sweden would still have to defend and feed the wast kingdom - so the true paradox occured in the hot summer of 1709: being freed of the aspiration of power in Europe, Sweden could turn to what we are really good at, instead of spending our youth on the battlefeilds of Europe. Anyway, if you buy "The battle of Poltava : The birth of the Russian Empire" by Peter Englund you should have some intrest in Scandinavian and Russian history of the early modern times, but if you do so, you will not be disappointed.