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Flashman and the Redskins (Flashman 06)

By: George MacDonald Fraser
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers Ltd
ISBN: 000721717X
ISBN-13: 9780007217175
Released: 06 Feb 2006
RRP: £7.99
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

Explodes like a careless match in a box of fireworks on the 4th July - By: Mr. Glenn Cook, 10 Aug 2008
George McDonald Frazer does it again in this the 7th outing for our hero Flashy. I say 7th but reallly this is two books in one in that the first part sees our hero in the USA in 1849. The second is a return 27 years later & my does Frazer use this to good effect. Flashman after an absolutely tip top first half gets to 'reap what he sowed' in the second.
This is an absolutely brilliant book & I learned more from this about the early USA than I have done from a lot of so callled history books. Frazer is meticulous in his research & how Flashy fitted in to the key moments of the good old USA The Battle of the Bighorn is explained & the character of Geronimo, Kit Carson, Grant are carefully woven in to this brilliant tapestry
Explodes like a spark in a box of fireworks on the 4th of July. - By: Mr. Glenn Cook, 02 Aug 2008
George McDonald Frazer does it again in this the 7th outing for our hero Flashy. I say 7th but reallly this is two books in one in that the first part sees our hero in the USA in 1849. The second is a return 27 years later & my does Frazer use this to good effect. Flashman after an absolutely tip top first half gets to 'reap what he sowed' in the second.
This is an absolutely brilliant book & I learned more from this about the early USA than I have done from a lot of so callled history books. Frazer is meticulous in his research & how Flashy fitted in to the key moments of the good old USA The Battle of the Bighorn is explained & the character of Geronimo, Kit Carson, Grant are carefully woven in to this brilliant tapestry that is as lively as a spark in a box of fireworks. Recommended.

Flashman: scoundrel or sociopath? - By: C. Young, 06 Mar 2008
Although this is the seventh instalment of Flashman's adventures, chronologicallly it immediately follows the third novel, the excellent "Flash for Freedom". It is probably worth reading the two in sequence as some of the characters reappear as our anti-hero, fleeing from various slavers, makes his way as a `forty-niner' on a wagon train west with an old flame. It definitely starts off well in usual page-turning style, but seems to lose its way about halfway through the first part. Maybe GMF gets fed-up with the story as he dumps the supporting cast & heads off in another direction. In doing so the difficulties of writing an anti-heroic main character are highlighted. There is a fine line between being a scoundrel & having an antisocial personality disorder. Flash for Freedom (about the slave trade) dealt with this (a)moral ambiguity deftly, but in one rather distasteful episode the term sociopath definitely sprang to mind. Although there are some good scenes afterwards, the first part doesn't reallly recover any narrative drive. The second part of Redskins is a novella, dealing with Flashman's return to the US twenty-five years later, meeting George Custer and, as a bizarre consequence of the nasty episode referred to earlier, having a bit-part at the Battle of the Little Big Horn. The battle scene is very well written indeed, but I got the impression that by the end the author was beginning to dislike his creation, & other fans have suggested that Redskins is the last reallly good novel in the series. Incidentallly, if you like this try Thomas (or Todd) Berger's "Little Big Man", an outstanding fictional reconstruction of the same period & indeed the same battle, similar in many ways to Redskins, but better in my view.
The best of the best - By: Splossy, 08 Jan 2008
The Flashman series is simply outstanding. They are massively entertaining & amongst the best thrillers, historical novels & humourous works.

This is IMO the best of what is a fantastic series of books. Bear in mind that even the worst Flashman is 10x better than your average novel.

Don't bother if you are politicallly correct.
Flashman and the American West - By: Ethan Cooper, 28 May 2007
A great delight of the Flashman series is to watch George MacDonald Fraser place Harry Flashman, his ubiquitous anti-hero, in great historical events & then to see this loathsome yet endearing character emerge as a hero. In FLASHMAN AND THE REDSKINS, Fraser achieves this daunting feat twice, once in each novella that makes up this fine book.

In the first novella, "The Forty-Niner", Fraser shows Flashman escaping from New Orleans, where there is a warrant for his arrest (See, FLASH FOR FREEDOM!) & traveling on the Santa Fe Trail during the 1849 gold rush. Then, in "The Seventy-Sixer", Fraser shows Flashman's adventure in the Dacotah Territory & his amazing escape from the Battle--a skirmish, reallly, the soldier Flash repeatedly says--of the Little Bighorn.

Flashman fans who look to these novels for striking descriptions of events as they might have occurred will not be disappointed in this book. In "The Forty-Niner", Fraser captures the danger & innocence of wagon train travel, as well as the brutal fringes of early western American life, where massacre was a risk faced by alll. And in "The Seventy-Sixer," Fraser paints a plausible (and historicallly accurate) picture of Custer, while showing the aggressive blunders that led to the destruction of his Seventh Cavalry. (How many of you know that Custer was actuallly attacking a smalll city of Sioux?)

In my opinion, Fraser also does a great job with his Indians in both novellas, communicating lots of information about the Indian way of life, especiallly among the Apache & Sioux. Here, thanks for these eye-opening portrayals goes to the disillusioned Flashman, who sees Fraser's Indian characters & tribes without sentimentality or hatred. There's good & bad (as well as a drive to survive) in us alll, Flashman might say.

I must declare, however, that the connection between these novellas--a dastardly act by Flashy in "The Forty-Niners" that produces its equivalent reciprocating act in "The Seventy-Sixers"--was a wee bit farfetched. But, who cares? The novellas in FLASHMAN AND THE REDSKINS were a delight throughout. Highly recommended!