To think that everything that happens in Flash for Freedom!, the third of the Flashman novels, arises out of a game of pontoon (with Benjamin Disraeli, no less) is testament to the writing abilities of author George MacDonald Fraser. The plotting is spectacular, and it is a wonder that ol' Flashy even gets into these messes, let alone gets out of them. He always seems like he's done for, but once again the jammy sod gets through his adventures essentially none the worse for wear, and usually having sampled the finest of the local women.
In some ways, Flash for Freedom! compares unfavourably to its two predecessors. For one, it has less laughs. To be sure, Flash is as shameless as ever (particularly with Cassy on page 275) but he spends much of the book in thrall to one force or another, whether under the watchful eye of a terrifying slave-ship captain, an American naval officer, Abraham Lincoln (yes, that's right), or various other players. Being the coward he is, he often errs on the side of caution and tries not to put his head above the parapet any more than he has to. This means he doesn't have the freedom to abuse his gift for lechery as much as he could in Flashman (where he romps through India and Afghanistan) and Royal Flash (where he was impersonating a prince, with all the power that commands). He also operates under a series of pseudonyms for the most part, so doesn't have to worry much about the damage his actions might do to the reputation of grand old Harry Flashman, patriot and war hero. The most amusing thing about the first Flashman book was how, no matter how shameless and cowardly he was, he always emerged to be (wrongly) thought of as a hero and upstanding gentleman. But by the end of Flash for Freedom!, no one involved is any the wiser as to who Flash really is. So yes, the laughs are rarer in this book, and this is in part because of Fraser's plotting. Whilst the plotting is ingenious, it does mean most of the time is spent getting Flashy into various scrapes and then out of them, rather than making the reader laugh.
But whilst it is not quite as uproariously funny as its predecessors, it is in some ways better. However, whether you are likely to think so depends solely on the reasons you have for reading the Flashman books. If you read them solely for laughs, Flash for Freedom! probably shouldn't be near the top of your list (though, as I have intimated, it does have its moments). But the Flashman series has always been more than just a comedic romp. The books are also cracking adventures, well-researched historical fiction and possessing of fully-realised characters. In these three regards, Flash for Freedom! represents the series well. The adventure is a strong one, taking him from England to the slave coast of Africa and then across the sea to the Caribbean then on to the USA, where he flits about the southern states. Both the fictional characters (Cassy was a treat) and the real-life historical figures (Abe Lincoln is awesome) are well-rendered.
But the greatest strength of Flash for Freedom! is its historical authenticity. Fraser has done his homework on the slave trade of the 1800s and there were things in this book which I hadn't known previously, even though I am a former history student. Slavery was more than just the common image of black people picking cotton in a field, or even about the horrors and indignities they suffered on the slave-ships and the plantations. Fraser does evoke this horror and humiliation of the human spirit (particularly through Cassy), but he also addresses the unseen side of the slave trade. He notes the corruption by which British and American businessmen and politicians would profit from this illegal trade (Flashy's father-in-law is a respectable businessman with one of his fingers in this particular rotten pie) and also the cancerous effect it had on the society as a whole (the trial at the end of the book becomes a farce as witnesses are intimidated, the judge is bought and the truth is shamelessly fudged). As one character remarks to Flashman on page 303: "Oh, it's a fine, dirty business... the slime and corruption doesn't end on the slave deck, I can tell you." Fraser also confronts the fact - an uncomfortable fact, for some people - that the slave trade could not have existed and could not have thrived without the complicity of black tribes in Africa (see page 71) and raises, on the same page, a surprisingly socialist point about working conditions among whites in British industry at the time. This is real history: uncomfortable truths abound.
Some readers may find it hard to reconcile the above sentiments with the fact that Flashman indulges in all the depravities. He uses the 'n-word' with abandon and rapes some of the female slaves (at one point he lets it be known that slavers wanted their female slaves to be pregnant by a white man as 'mulatto' children fetched a higher price. Jesus Christ.) But he is a product of his time and of his circumstances; that does not make it right, and you may feel even guiltier about some of the funnier parts of the novel than you usually are, but if you're looking to the Flashman books for morality, then you're really in the wrong place. In my opinion, the casual, matter-of-fact approach by many of the characters (including Flashman) to the brutalities of slavery is more important than any sanitised politically-correct hand-wringing, as it shows just how easily people can be sucked into depravities and rationalise them if it is seen to be 'normal', as it was at the time.
It also educates readers - and I'd wager, without judgement, that there are many avid readers of the Flashman series who'd never dream of picking up a history book - on the realities and complexities of the slave trade. And, make no mistake, the slave trade is still going on today. It might not be the same as in the mid-1800s, but tens of millions are still forced into slavery in the 21st century, and today's anti-slavery crusaders are much less prominent than the likes of Abraham Lincoln. That might seem a rather serious note on which to end a review of what is essentially an adventure-comedy romp, but the Flashman series has always been much more than that, and Flash for Freedom! illustrates it perfectly.