A stunningly flawless collection of short stories from the author of Flashman. Written with humour, intelligence and a maverick eye for character, the stories are a fictionalized reminiscence of the author's time serving as a junior officer in a regiment of Scottish Highlanders soon after the end of the Second World War. The Complete McAuslan brings together three previously published collections: 1970's The General Danced at Dawn, 1974's McAuslan in the Rough and 1988's The Sheikh and the Dustbin.
Told with an unsentimental wistfulness that borders on paradox, The Complete McAuslan is tonally similar to Fraser's peerless war memoir Quartered Safe Out Here. The members of Fraser's battalion are vividly brought to life, and I found I particularly enjoyed those stories which served as character studies of individual people (for example, 'Wee Wullie', 'Captain Errol' and 'The Sheikh and the Dustbin'). That said, there's huge variety in the stories – you'd never think service in a peacetime garrison could be so eventful – and even the sports stories (covering, amongst others, football in 'Play Up, Play Up, and Get Tore In' and golf in 'McAuslan in the Rough') are gripping. One of the most seemingly unassuming stories, 'General Knowledge, Private Information', sees the battalion competing in a general knowledge quiz, and even that's surprisingly tense.
The titular character, McAuslan, isn't the protagonist: I suppose they're called the McAuslan stories just because that's as good a name as any. Rather it is 'Dand MacNeill' who is the author in all but name. McAuslan is a recurring character, often referred to as 'the dirtiest soldier in the world'. Whilst a lot of the stories revolve around him, he's not the main focus and you don't have to be worried about a bunch of crude slapstick stories about some unkempt buffoon. That's not what these are. The McAuslan stories are a collection of gems, full of fully-realised characters, unsentimental pathos, strong storytelling and intelligent humour. Like Wee Wullie in the desert, I just wish they could have gone on for ever.