New Post

Marching Into Madness: Napoleon’s Russian Disaster: How One Man's Pride Froze 400,000 Soldiers to Death

In 1812, Napoleon Bonaparte—at the height of his power—launched one of the most ambitious military invasions in history. Within months, it became a frozen nightmare that left over 400,000 French soldiers dead, scattered across the icy wastelands of Russia.
Marching Into Madness is a gripping, harrowing account of how ego, overconfidence, and blind ambition led a brilliant commander to orchestrate one of history’s most tragic military disasters. This book explores not just the facts of the campaign, but the fatal psychology behind it—drawing chilling lessons on the cost of unchecked pride in leadership.
Perfect for fans of military history, psychological biography, and strategic cautionary tales, this book is a sobering reminder: when power deafens a leader to reason, empires fall—and men freeze.