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  1. #1

    Default Looking for book series

    A friend, now deceased, once told me of a series of historic fantasy novels about a Victorian-era English army officer who traveled the world and arranged to meet or interact with just about every historical character of the time. Unfortunately, CRS has set in and I cannot recall the author's name. Help! Thanks in advance.

  2. Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Dick Hosmer View Post
    A friend, now deceased, once told me of a series of historic fantasy novels about a Victorian-era English army officer who traveled the world and arranged to meet or interact with just about every historical character of the time. Unfortunately, CRS has set in and I cannot recall the author's name. Help! Thanks in advance.
    http://1mpages.com/HistoricalFiction.html

  3. #3

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    INTERESTING resource - thanks, Joe.

    FWIW - it was "The Flashman Papers".

  4. #4

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    Dick: The author is George MacDonald Fraser. You would enjoy his "Flashman and the Redskins". Harry Flashman was with Custer and survived the LBH!

    (Note - I've read most of the Flashman Books and was quite entertained. However, the last couple I read lacked something and became tedious. My favorite was "Flash at the Charge" (Crimea).

    Spoiler Alert - Flashman is a total coward, scoundrel and poltroon (and survives to truthfully tell the whole story). The only 'Flashman' movie adaptation, I am aware of, was the "Royal Flash". The lead character was poorly cast (Malcolm McDowell) and it is the weakest of the Flashman plots.

    FWIW - G.M. Fraser did the screen play for the best, IMHO, "Three Musketeers" and "Four Musketeers" movie (1973 version, with Peter York, Oliver Reed, Richard Chamberlain, Raquel Welch, Charlton Heston, and the Great Christopher Lee, as 'Rochefort').

    Flashman-LBH.JPG
    Last edited by butlersrangers; 06-13-2015 at 10:27.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Sep 2009
    Location
    Monroe, Louisiana
    Posts
    162

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    Any of Fraser's books are worth reading. Quartered Safe Out Here is his personal story of the Burma campaign in WW II and very well worth reading. The man was a real soldier in one of the nastiest theaters of WW II and his recollections are priceless. He also is very much not PC.

    Jerry Liles

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