Sumption's first book on the Hundred Years War is great. He protrays his subjects with such vigor and imagination. Edward III, Philip VI, William of Hainualt...all of these men fly off the page onto a storyboard that is bloody, but is great. Edward III is a military leader who is a calculating politican who makes disatrous mistakes in the first phase of the war, then remerges as the aribtor of Europe after Crecy and Calais; Philip VI is the weak minded, suspicious King of France who is victorius at first but then is draw downhill by his mistakes and Edward's impending greatness. Truly this is a superb work.
This book gets five stars all the way. It is the greatest book on the first phrase of the Hundred Years war. Everything was simply fascinating. At to it readability and you can't deny that Sumption has skill. I just wish he would quit his court job and produce more of these wonderful books.