Allan Lawrence Mallinson ist ein englischer Autor und ehemaliger Offizier der britischen Armee. Er ist vor allem für seine Romanserie bekannt, die fiktiv das Leben von Matthew Hervey, einem Offizier, schildert. Seine Erzählungen erstrecken sich vom späten Napoleonischen Krieg bis zu nachfolgenden Kolonialkonflikten in Indien, Nordamerika und Südafrika. Mallinson bringt eine authentische Perspektive auf das militärische Leben und historische Epochen in seine Werke ein.
Edgehill, 1642: Surveying the disastrous scene in the aftermath of the first
battle of the English Civil War, Oliver Cromwell realizes that war can no
longer be made in the old, feudal way: there has to be system and discipline,
and therefore - eventually - a standing professional army.
January 1829: George IV is on the throne, Wellington is England's prime-
minister, and snow is falling thickly on the London streets as Lieutenant-
Colonel Matthew Hervey is summoned to the Horse Guards in the expectation of
command of his regiment, the 6th Light Dragoons.
One of the great questions in the ongoing discussions and debate about the First World War is why did winning take so long and exact so appalling a human cost? The author argues that from day one of the war Britain was wrong-footed by absurdly faulty French military doctrine and paid, as a result, an unnecessarily high price in casualties.
It is 1831, riots and rebellions are widespread . Somervile has persuaded the
Court of Directors of the East India Company to approve an increase in the
Madras military establishment. The Rajah is in revolt against the East India
Company's terms and Hervey's regiment is called upon to crush the rebellion.
Canada 1817Captain Matthew Hervey is suffering the effects of unrest within
his beloved regiment, the 6th Light Dragoons. While, closer to home, he and
his commanding officer have embarked on a collision course - the consequences
of which will be devastating...
Matthew Hervey of the 6th Light Dragoons is urgently summoned to the Cape
Colony when he learns that the Zulu warrior King Shaka is about to wage war.
Separated from his troop, Hervey must lead Shaka's queen across a hostile land
where sanctuary has never seemed further away ...
January 1830, and one of the hardest winters in memory . Will Hervey be able
to keep out of the fighting - a war that would lead, nearly a century later,
to Britain's involvement in an altogether different war - while safeguarding
his country's interests?
Following their successful invasion of Coorg in order to remove the state's deranged rajah, Lieutenant-Colonel Matthew Hervey is looking forward to a few months' respite for his regiment, the 6th Light Dragoons, and his family. Indeed, with his stock standing high throughout British India, he has rarely counted himself so content. But it is not to last. Lord William Bentinck, the governor-general believes that Hervey is just the man to form and lead a force of suppression against the 'thuggee' criminals who threaten the stability of both the East India Company's domains and a number of friendly princely states. And so Hervey and the Sixth embark on a campaign that will prove to be infinitely complex and very bloody - and put Hervey's own family in very real danger. Brilliantly researched, beautifully written and wholly engaging, The Tigress of Mysore is set against the backdrop of an India in transition as Allan Mallinson's series hero unwittingly takes his first steps on the tumultuous road that will ultimately lead to the Indian Mutiny . . .
Badajoz: Christmas 1826 Matthew Hervey of the 6th Light Dragoons is a prisoner
of the Spanish, incarcerated in the infamous fortress of Badajoz. He and the
Sixth had survived Corunna to endure three more years of brutal fighting that
would culminate in one of the most vital and vicious confrontations of the
campaign - the siege of Badajoz.