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The Pyrates (1983)

di George MacDonald Fraser

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5621242,578 (3.71)29
In THE PYRATES, the author of the celebrated Flashman novels pays tongue-in-cheek homage to the swashbuckling books and movies that have always stirred his imagination. In these rollicking pages you'll find tall ships and desert islands; impossibly gallant adventurers and glamorous heroines; devilishly sinister cads and ghastly dungeons; improbably acrobatic duels and hair's-breadth escapes; and more plot twists than you can shake a rapier at. A deliriously entertaining combination of Errol Flynn action-adventure and Naked Gun pastiche, in a new package geared to the legions of Flashman fanatics.… (altro)
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After having read the twelve Flashman novels and enjoying them immensely, I order this book along with Black Ajax and Mr. American, penned by the same author.

As the name implies, it is primarily involved with following a crew of 17th century Caribbean pirates, as they battle the Spanish and English navies. The chief protagonist is a British naval officer, Captain Avery, who is something of a comic book hero, a handsome, dashing caricature. In addition to a collection of pirate captains, a Colonel Blood sets off nicely against Avery, because he is very much in the Harry Flashman mold, venal, cowardly, and very much out for himself.

While starting off mildly entertaining, the book soon bogged down into a never-ending adventure that seemingly goes on forever. There were a number of clever asides, mixing contemporary references with period activities, and a healthy dose of magical realism, but not enough to keep this monstrosity afloat.

Certainly not the equal of the Flashman series, or even Black Ajax and Mr. American. Can’t recommend. ( )
  santhony | May 16, 2023 |
I really wanted to like this book. The idea of a humorous pirate story appeal to me. Sadly, the humor didn't lang and the actual story was too referential and the characters a little too on-the-nose for my tastes. ( )
  wishanem | May 27, 2021 |
Right from the off, when author George MacDonald Fraser announces 'BOOK THE FIRST' in gloriously bombastic capital letters, The Pyrates is an absurdly over-the-top anachronistic comedy-adventure romp in the vein of Monty Python, Terry Pratchett and the Carry On films (though Fraser's book predates Pratchett, whose first Discworld book was published in the same year). Stiff-upper-lipped English heroes shouting 'sa-ha!', roguish scoundrels on the make, damsels-in-distress (bosom-heaving distress, mark you), swarthy pirates, sea battles, swashbuckling… it's all here and then some. Whether it's a metatextual imploration to get on with it and 'skip the tourist stuff' when eloquently setting the scene (pg. 334), a fiery maiden's wrath "dissolving like an election pledge" (pg. 323) or a swarthy pirate's curved scimitar "ideal for thrusting round corners in a crafty Oriental way" but no match for straight British steel (pp125-6), every line contains a joke or an aside or a sly reference. And in such a fertile terrain as pirate fiction, the accomplished Fraser allows his imagination free rein. It doesn't compare to the Flashman Papers, of course – nothing does – but it is still joyous.

Like his later novel The Reavers, a similarly-styled romp, the pace can drag despite its seemingly short length, and The Pyrates requires more effort and application from its reader than many will deem it warrants. It can, admittedly, be hard to stay afloat in the sheer tsunami of tropes and jokes and dialects. But Fraser's enthusiasm is infectious, and it seems churlish to complain about a book being too rich and bounteous. Not every story has to be a lean, mean plot-driven machine. The Pyrates is a bulky treasure-room filled with gold and rubies and other assorted baubles, and the effect is that it can sometimes be hard to focus the eye on any one dazzling thing. As Fraser says – quoting the real-life pirate Francis Drake – on page 118: "We shall bring ye to the Treasure House o' the World, and… blame yourselves if ye go away empty-handed." That should sum up your approach to this book. ( )
  MikeFutcher | Jan 23, 2017 |
A rip-roaring pyratical romp. I enjoyed every minute of this book, daft as it was.Good escapist fun. ( )
  MsStephie | Jul 12, 2014 |
George MacDonald Fraser disappointed me with this effort. There just was no one to be appalled by, or root for. Sorry George, I agreed when you left this sub-genre and never returned. ( )
  DinadansFriend | Feb 3, 2014 |
The only thing remotely like it is William Goldman's "The Princess Bride", and I hardly know how to praise a book more.
aggiunto da MissWatson | modificaInternational Herald Tribune, Alan Ryan (Aug 20, 1984)
 

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In Memory of the Most Reverend and Right Honourable Lancelot Blackburne (1658 - 1743) Archbishop of York and buccaneer
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It began in the old and golden days of England, in a time when all the hedgerows were green and the roads dusty, when hawthorn and wild roses bloomed, when big-bellied landlords brewed rich October ale at a penny a pint for rakish high-footed cavaliers with jingling spurs and long rapiers, when squires ate roast beef and belched and damned the Dutch over their claret while their faithful hounds slumbered on the rushes by the hearth, when summers were long and warm and drowsy, with honeysuckle and hollyhocks by cottage walls, when winter nights were clear and sharp with frost-rimmed moons shining on the silent snow, and Claud Duval and Swift Nick Nevison lurked in the bosky thickets, teeth gleaming beneath their masks as they heard the rumble of caches bearing paunchy well-lined nabobs and bright-eyed ladies with powdered hair who would gladly tread a measure by the wayside with the gallant tobyman, and bestow a kiss to save their husbands' guineas; an England where good King Charles lounges amiably on his throne, and scandalised Mr Pepys (or was it Mr Evelyn?) by climbing walls to ogle Pretty Nell; where gallants roistered and diced away their fathers' fortunes; where beaming yokels in spotless smocks made hay in the sunshine and ate bread and cheese and quaffed foaming tankards fit to do G.K. Chesterton's heart good; where threadbare pedlars with sharp eyes and long noses shared their morning bacon with weary travellers in dew-pearled woods and discoursed endlessly of 'Hudibras' and the glories of nature; where burly earringed smugglers brought their stealthy sloops into midnight coves, and stowed their hard-run cargoes of Hollands and Brussels and fragrant Virginia in clammy caverns; where the poachers of Lincolnshire lifted hares and pheasants by the bushel and buffeted gamekeepers and jumped o'er everywhere . . .
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In THE PYRATES, the author of the celebrated Flashman novels pays tongue-in-cheek homage to the swashbuckling books and movies that have always stirred his imagination. In these rollicking pages you'll find tall ships and desert islands; impossibly gallant adventurers and glamorous heroines; devilishly sinister cads and ghastly dungeons; improbably acrobatic duels and hair's-breadth escapes; and more plot twists than you can shake a rapier at. A deliriously entertaining combination of Errol Flynn action-adventure and Naked Gun pastiche, in a new package geared to the legions of Flashman fanatics.

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