[[quoteright:345:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/BERNARD_CORNWELL_5640.PNG]]
[[caption-width-right:345:If your History teacher wrote novels.]]

->''"To keep on writing - every day. To wait for inspiration is a sure way to start Googling sites such as 'Exciting Careers in Accountancy'. And, new writers excepted, there is no such thing as writer's block. Okay, some days it's like swimming through treacle, but you still have to keep going. I'll believe in writer's block the day that a hospital accepts a nurse's absence because she has 'nurse's block'. His or her job is FAR more difficult than a writer's job."''
-->-- (On being asked what was the most important thing he'd learned in his writing experience).

Bernard Cornwell (born 23 February 1944) is a British author of HistoricalFiction, often about adventures in wartime.

He is most famous for the ''Literature/{{Sharpe}}'' novels, chiefly set during UsefulNotes/TheNapoleonicWars, which were adapted into a television movie series starring Creator/SeanBean as Richard Sharpe.

Cornwell was adopted as a child by a strict Christian sect. He came to break all ties with them and took [[NomDeMom his mother's maiden name.]]

He worked for the Creator/{{BBC}} and other broadcast news media before becoming a novelist. He started writing fiction because he'd moved to the United States with his American wife and he couldn't get a Green Card at the time - writing required no work permits. (He's a U.S. citizen now.)

Cornwell was inspired by the Literature/HoratioHornblower naval novels of C.S. Forester and decided to write stuff like that about the army. His first novel, ''Sharpe's Eagle'', was published in 1981 and the rest is history. Four decades later, he's still at it, and has helped inspire other contemporary authors of historical fiction.

In 2005 he was made an Officer of the Order of the British Empire "for his services to literature and furtherance of British culture abroad."

[[http://www.bernardcornwell.net/ Has a personal website]] with an active Q&A and bulletin board.

Not related to Creator/PatriciaCornwell.

----
!!Works by Cornwell include:

* ''Literature/{{Sharpe}}'' -- follows the career of a soldier in the [[UsefulNotes/TheNapoleonicWars Peninsular War]] and beyond, up to Waterloo. After this, prequel novels covering the Anglo-Indian Wars and other conflicts were written, as well as more novels set during the Peninsular War. Adapted into a [[Series/{{Sharpe}} series of the same name.]]
* ''Literature/TheWarlordChronicles'' -- [[{{Demythification}} "realistic"]] [[MaybeMagicMaybeMundane retelling]] of Myth/ArthurianLegend, set around the Anglo-Saxon invasion of Britain in the 5th century.
* ''Literature/TheGrailQuest'' -- a series set during UsefulNotes/TheHundredYearsWar.
* ''Literature/TheSaxonStories'' -- a series set during the Danish invasion of Anglo-Saxon England. Adapted into the series ''Series/TheLastKingdom''.
* ''Literature/TheStarbuckChronicles'' -- set during UsefulNotes/TheAmericanCivilWar.
* ''Literature/{{Azincourt}}'' -- set during UsefulNotes/TheHundredYearsWar.
* ''Literature/{{Stonehenge}}'' -- set in prehistoric Britain.
* ''Literature/GallowsThief'' -- a murder mystery set shortly after the Napoleonic Wars.
* ''Literature/{{Redcoat}}'' -- set during UsefulNotes/TheAmericanRevolution.
* ''Literature/TheFort'' -- set during UsefulNotes/TheAmericanRevolution.
* ''A Crowning Mercy'', ''Fallen Angels'', and ''Coat of Arms'' -- an UsefulNotes/EnglishCivilWar trilogy co-written with his wife Judy, under the PenName "Susannah Kells".
* ''Fools And Mortals'' -- set in Elizabethan England, charting the fortunes of Creator/WilliamShakespeare and his theatre company. Has the distinction of being his first - and to date only - book in which nobody dies.
----
!!These and other works provide examples of:

* AntiHero: Derfel is the closest to a clean-cut hero and even he is relatively unfazed by what most people would consider horrifying. Given the time he lives in, this is probably DeliberateValuesDissonance.
* AuthorAppeal:
** Aside from the war stuff, Cornwell is an avid sailor with his own boat and has written contemporary thrillers - the only non-historical fiction stuff he's done - that [[WriteWhatYouKnow revolve around sailing]]. This also carries over into ''Literature/TheSaxonStories'' where the construction, maintenance, and operation of various Anglo-Saxon and Danish ships is extensively - though never boringly - described.
** Mr. Cornwell would like you to know that English Archers Are Badass. Even in the novels set well before the longbow came to prominence there ''will'' be a master archer and the protagonist ''will'' gush about the efficacy of archery.
* BadassCrew: Most prominently Sharpe's Rifles, but his other heroes also tend to get their own crews.
* BeenThereShapedHistory: Since his novels are usually set around historical battles, like Waterloo or Agincourt, and his protagonists tend to be military types.
* BraveScot: If there are Scots in a Cornwell work you can bet they'll be badass.
* CantUnhearIt: Cornwell is such a fan of Creator/SeanBean's performance as Richard Sharpe that he actually {{retconned}} Sharpe's backstory in the books (which he was still writing, particularly the pre Peninsular War ones) to include time OopNorth to justify Bean's Sheffield accent.
%%* TheCavalierYears
* CorruptChurch: Mainly as an institution, but also individual clergy and lay people, though there are decent ones too. Gets more noticeable with later-written works.
* CreatorCameo: He plays a {{Mook}} who gets killed by Uhtred midway through Season 3 of ''Series/TheLastKingdom''.
* CreatorProvincialism: {{Subverted}}. The full title of his 2014 non-fiction book ''Waterloo: The History of Four Days, Three Armies, and Three Battles''[[note]]meaning the battles of Ligny (Napoleon vs. Blücher, June 16), Quatre Bras (Wellington vs. Ney, June 16), and Waterloo (Napoleon vs. Wellington & Blücher, June 18)[[/note]] doesn't count the battle of Wavre (Thielmann vs. Grouchy, June 18-19), but the book itself does explain the importance of Wavre and generally gives the Prussians, Dutch, and Hanoverian troops full credit and generally averts the [[AmericaWonWorldWarII Britain Beat Napoleon]] mentality.
* DeliberateValuesDissonance: A given considering historical fiction. In his first Saxon book, the protagonist Uhtred recalls Norsemen raping women after raids, and though he didn't take part himself (being a ChickMagnet), he isn't particularly bothered by it either. Even the consistent NiceGuy of Cornwell's protagonists, Derfel Cadarn of ''Literature/TheWarlordChronicles'', is a warlord who's not particularly fazed by human sacrifice, or ColdBloodedTorture.
* HistoricalDomainCharacter: Several.
** Those featured in the ''Sharpe'' books include UsefulNotes/TheDukeOfWellington, UsefulNotes/NapoleonBonaparte, UsefulNotes/HoratioNelson and Thomas Cochrane.
** The ''Saxon Stories'' feature UsefulNotes/AlfredTheGreat of England. The protagonist Uhtred is named after a real Uhtred of Bebbanburg who Cornwell claims to be descended from.
** The ''Grail Quest'' series has Edward III of England and his son Edward the Black Prince.
** ''Azincourt'' has Henry V of England. The protagonist Nicholas Hook is named after a real archer from the English muster rolls for the Battle of Agincourt. BoisterousBruiser Sir John Cornewaille is also real, but Cornwell denies any relation.
** Derfel in ''The Warlord Chronicles'' is based on a possibly legendary saint by that name. The Anglo-Saxon pioneer leaders in Britain like Aelle and Cerdic also feature.
* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: Most of his protagonists fall into this category, with [[Literature/TheSaxonStories Uhtred]] verging on being a SociopathicHero at points before steadily mellowing out with age. Even the nicest of his protagonists, [[Literature/TheWarlordChronicles Derfel]], has moments of this - though he's consistently a NiceGuy.
* MacGuffin:
** ''The Warlord Chronicles'' has a subplot about the Cauldron of Clyddno Eiddyn, one of the legendary Thirteen Treasures of Britain and clearly meant to prefigure the Holy Grail in the later Arthurian legends. The men who go looking for it are known as the Warriors of the Cauldron, akin to the later Grail Knights.
** ''The Grail Quest'' involves the actual Holy Grail, the Lance of St. George and the Sword of St. Peter, or so the characters believe.
** ''Sharpe's Rifles'' has the Holy Banner of Santiago (St. James), the oriflamme flag dating from the Reconquest (though it gets re-sewn), which is to be used as a symbolic rallying point for Spanish resistance to Napoleon. Everybody wants it - except Sharpe.
* MarketBasedTitle:
** The first book in the ''Grail Quest'' trilogy, ''Harlequin'', became ''The Archer's Tale'' for the US market because of the [[RomanceNovel Harlequin Romance]] line.
** ''Azincourt'' (the original French name for the place) became ''Agincourt'' (how it's known in the English-speaking world) for the US market.
* NiceGuy: Such characters are rare as main protagonists in Cornwell's work (the only real example is Derfel), but there's usually at least one or two in the supporting cast.
* OldShame: While not ashamed of them, Cornwell insists he's ''never'' re-read ''Sharpe's Eagle'' or ''Sharpe's Gold'' since publishing them in 1981 because he wrote them mainly as practice for ''Sharpe's Company'', his favourite in the series.
* OrphanedSeries: More ''Starbuck Chronicles'' books are increasingly unlikely. The series was put on hold after reaching the Battle of Antietam when Cornwell decided to write more ''Sharpe'', and then he began other series... Apparently, he found it increasingly difficult to write a convincingly sympathetic story from the Confederate viewpoint.
%%* RagtagBunchOfMisfits
%%* RatedMForManly
* ShoutOut: He and Richard Sharpe are also the frequent subject of this (see [[https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/ReferencedBy/Sharpe here]]), but examples in his own work include:
** Rifleman Dodd is ''Sharpe's Escape'' is meant to be Matthew Dodd from ''Literature/DeathToTheFrench'' (itself better known as ''Rifleman Dodd'' [[MarketBasedTitle to Americans]]) by C.S. Forester.
** Sharpe is also the man who found [[Literature/TheMoonstone the Moonstone]] in India.
** Richard Sharpe is named after [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Sharp a rugby player.]] Cornwell initially intended this only as a better placeholder than "Lieutenant XXX", but [[PermanentPlaceholder it quickly stuck]].
* StevenUlyssesPerHero: The protagonist of ''Gallows Thief'' is a retired ''cavalryman'' turned private investigator called ''Rider'' Sandman.
* TheVerse: Many of his historical works take place in the same "universe" (though considering this is HistoricalFiction, this is a lot easier to do than, say, science fiction):
** ''The Starbuck Chronicles'' features Sharpe's adult son Patrick Lassan. He even has Sharpe's old sword! He mentions offhandedly that his sister married into the nobility, his father has died of old age, and his mother is alive, but lonely.
** Thomas of Hookton from the ''Grail Quest'' series is mentioned in ''Azincourt'' as having died prosperous, "a lord of a thousand acres".
** Rider Sandman of ''Gallows Thief'' was once saved by a (familiar-sounding) Rifle officer and his men during the wars.
** Even one of his non-historical novels, ''Sea Lord'', has a namesake and possible descendant of Lord John Rossendale from ''Sharpe'' as its protagonist.
%%* WarIsGlorious
%%* WarIsHell
%%* WoodenShipsAndIronMen: Whenever Sharpe gets on a boat.

----