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  2. Quartered Safe Out Here - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quartered_Safe_Out_Here

    Fraser's book has also been praised by the English author Melvyn Bragg and the American playwright David Mamet. [ 3 ] The book's title is a quotation from Rudyard Kipling 's 1890 poem " Gunga Din ", [ 4 ] and is ironic since Fraser certainly was not "quartered safe out here", while serving in Burma during one of the final campaigns of the war.

  3. The Flashman Papers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Flashman_Papers

    The Flashman Papers is a series of novels and short stories written by George MacDonald Fraser, the first of which was published in 1969. The books centre on the exploits of the fictional protagonist Harry Flashman.

  4. George MacDonald Fraser - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_MacDonald_Fraser

    George MacDonald Fraser OBE FRSL (2 April 1925 – 2 January 2008) was a Scottish author and screenwriter. He is best known for a series of works that featured the character Flashman .

  5. Harry Flashman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harry_Flashman

    In the Jackson Speed Memoirs, Robert Peecher borrows heavily from George MacDonald Fraser's Flashman in creating the Jackson Speed character. [13] Like Flashman, Speed is a womanizer and a coward who is undeservedly marked as a hero by those around him. Peecher also adopts the literary device used by Fraser of the "discovered" memoirs.

  6. The Pyrates - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Pyrates

    Written in arch, ironic style and containing a great deal of deliberate anachronism, it traces the adventures of a classic hero (Captain Benjamin Avery, RN, very loosely based on Henry Avery), multiple damsels in distress, and the six captains who lead the infamous Coast Brotherhood (Calico Jack Rackham, Black Bilbo, Firebeard, Happy Dan Pew, Akbar the Terrible and Sheba the She-Wolf).

  7. Flashman (novel) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flashman_(novel)

    George MacDonald Fraser was a journalist who dreamt of becoming a novelist. He wrote a straight historical novel in the mid-1950s which no one would publish and came to feel that he would achieve success only if he did something in a more comical vein.

  8. Flash for Freedom! - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flash_for_Freedom!

    From Dahomey to the slave state of Mississippi, Flashman has cause to regret a game of pontoon with Benjamin Disraeli and Lord George Bentinck.From his ambition for a seat in the House of Commons, he has to settle instead for a role in the West African slave trade, under the command of Captain John Charity Spring, a Latin-spouting madman.

  9. Flashman at the Charge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flashman_at_the_Charge

    Flashman at the Charge is a 1973 novel by George MacDonald Fraser. It is the fourth of the Flashman novels. Playboy magazine serialised Flashman at the Charge in 1973 in their April, May and June issues. The serialisation is unabridged, including most of the notes and appendixes, and features a few illustrations, collages from various paintings ...