Customer Reviews
Over in a Flash..... - By: C. H. Kaberry, 09 Nov 2008 
This is the 5th Flashman novel (chronologicallly) & is by far the best - so far. Fraser has nailed this one. Fast action, historical interest & the usual hillarious antics of Flashman make it an excellent read. Couldn't put this one down. Frequently tittered away to myself on my train journey to work. Other passengers probably thought I was mad! Thoroughly recommended.
Flashman vs the slave trade - By: C. Young, 19 Feb 2008 
The third of the Flashman series is a sublime meeting of form & function, way ahead of the first two novels. Wrapped up in a fast-moving, funny & genuinely exciting yarn is the author's well-researched mission to inform us of the horror, the complexity & the importance in the 19th century of the slave trade. Who better to cast a cynical eye on that most immoral of endeavours (almost incomprehensible to the modern mind) than our amoral `hands-on' anti-hero, Flashman? The author takes our engagingly unreliable, notoriously non-PC guide through the whole process, from the slave ship picking up its miserable cargo on the African coast, through the markets & the plantations of the slave states & on to the underground abolitionists helping runaways escape North. Even throws in a pivotal encounter with a young Abe Lincoln. Brilliant stuff, informing & entertaining in equal measure.
Flashman Comes to America (part 5 of 12) - By: Mr. William Oxley, 29 Dec 2007 
Harry Flashman comes to America, not of his own choosing, & not aboard a luxury Ocean cruiser with the cream of society. But again Flash is on the run after a game of 21 ends up with him in hot water. Needing a quick exit he has no choice but to board a slaver. Soon he is out of one bed & into another, out of one frying pan & into another. Find out which bed & which frying pan now! Once you open the first page you will be dying to find out who is trying to trim Flash's mustache.
The great thing about Flashman is the historic journeys that he takes you on which you do not learn at school in your history lessons. The slave trade was not the finest hour of the British Empire, but here the author enters the subject with abandon. And we also meet some truly influential historical figures in Disraeli & Lincoln.
A 6-SHOOTER of a read: historical, humorous, educational, tense, sexy, & the best of British.
Nefarious dealings - By: Damian Patrick Kelly, 20 Jul 2007 
This is a story with a lesson. Never play vingt-et-un with Disraeli! Flashy is in a spot of bother again & the father in law packs him off to the Americas. Lucky escape you might think? But the ship he travels in happens to be a slaver. Damned inconvenient!
A series of leaps between frying pans & fires adds up to another exciting adventure for Flashy. Just watch out for that cad Abe Lincoln, he might be a bit of a bounder.
Shiver me timbers. - By: Simon Hale, 14 Apr 2007 
Fantastic! It is impossible not to give any Flashman a 5 out of 5 & this one certainly does not disappoint.
Who would have thought that a simple game of pontoon with the ladies could have led to the latest enstalment of trouble that our Anti Hero Lt Harry Flashman manages to get himself into.
Its a rollercoaster ride that takes Flashman on a slave boat owned by his father in law, firstly to the West Coast of Africa & then, not without incident across the atlantic,chased by the US Navy, to New Orleans & then on the run through the new world as our resident coward & womaniser attempts to make his way to his beloved Enland without getting intered by the authorities, shot by aggrieved husbands or forced into marriage by large breasted brothel owners. A Flashman book would not be the same without running into notable characters in history, & believe me, as normal you will not be disappointed. This is a hugely funny book, & although it has an important message regarding our history, it gives this message without taking us away from the reason we are reading this book, & this is to have fun. Believe me you will have fun.