Ratings6
Average rating3.5
Harry Flashman: the unrepentant bully of Tom Brown's schooldays, now with a Victoria Cross, has three main talents - horsemanship, facility with foreign languages and fornication. A reluctant hero, Flashman plays a key part in most of the defining military campaigns of the 19th century, despite trying his utmost to escape them all.
This fourth chronicle deals with the Crimea, Balaclava and Russian expansion into the East. As usual our anti-hero Flashman is right at the heart of events. Very politically incorrect, his desire for self-preservation, along with his usual amusing insights, make the book a pleasure to read. Definitely one of the stronger entries in the series.
Fraser's #4 Flashman - and we take in the Crimean War, some time in Russia and a sojourn in Kazakhstan / Uzbekistan where Yakub Beg was leading resistance to Russia pushing in to Central Asia, the book covering the period 1854-55.
As usual, we are treated to Flashman being woven into accurate historical events and mixing with some well known historical figures. The Battle at Balaclava is the key in this novel.
There are various spoilers below, so it this is a Flashman novel you plan on reading in the near future, give this review a miss!
Flashman is back in London, but aware of pending trouble between the Ottoman Empire and Russia secures himself a position on the Board or Ordnance, to avoid being mixed up in it. Events conspire however, and he is appointed by Prince Albert to look after a young German cousin, Wilhelm of Celle, eventually accompanying him to Bulgaria where the British troops were massing for the advance, and then across the Black Sea to Crimea.
When Flashman fails to protect Willy, who is young and reckless and charges out onto the field of battle prematurely, he is attached to Raglan's staff, where is falls in with Lew Nolan - the famed deliverer of the battle commands who is largely blamed for the miscommunication that led to the charge. As well as Raglan and Nolan, Flashman mixes with all the other well known figures at Balaclava - Cardigan, Scarlett, Lucan, Campbell. As it turns out, Flashman plays a larger part than anyone, taking part not only in the Charge of the Light (cavalry) Brigade, but also present at Campbell's Thin Red Line with the 93rd Regiment and Scarlett's uphill charge with the Heavy Cavalry in their attach on Russian Cavalry.
But it is the Charge of the Light Brigade that Flashman breaks the enemy line and while looking for escape is captured by the Russians. There is now a passage of the novel where Flashman is taken to an estate beyond Sevastopol where he is the prisoner of Count Pencherjevsky – a Cossack Hetman who is now the feudal Russian lord of the large estate. Supposedly waiting until he can be exchanged for a Russian prisoner of equal standing, Flashman is here reunited with an old schoolmate, Scud East, from Rugby School, also a prisoner. While Flashman is bedding the daughter of the Count, Scud East is spying on a meeting of important Russian officers and they discover the Russian Plot to invade British India through Central Asia. The escape from the estate, East's escape to Crimea, and Flashman's recapture by Russians ends this part of the story and we join Flashman in Central Asia for the third part to this novel.
With his recapture, Flashman meets Nikolay Pavlovich Ignatieff again, having briefly encountered him before his time in the estate, and Ignatieff is cast as the violent villain of this story. Taken on the Russian advance into Central Asia, on the way to the attack on British India, circumstances again conspire to place Flashman in a prison cell with Yakub Beg and Izzat Kutebar, the former being a Tajik leader of the resistance fighting against Russia's advances into their lands, the latter an aging guerilla leader working with Yakub Beg. In a daring rescue the three are thrown together and Flashman is forced into a role in attacking the Russian ships coming down the Syr Darya river to deliver the masses of ammunition for the attack on India - the destruction of this not only stops the Russian attack on India but sets the Russians back on their advance through Central Asia.
Again Fraser is masterful in wrapping historic events around Flashman and some fictional supporting characters. The historic characters come to life (accurately or not, who can say) as they interact with Flashman, as he looks to minimise his involvement in risky business, events conspire to have him in the thick of it.
This book along with the original are perhaps the strongest of those I have read so far.
4.5 stars, rounded down to the typical 4 I have awarded each Flashman novel so far.