I'm late in getting to this one, but I wanted to put in my two cents (Canadian). I'd already read and commented on this book, but I read it again anyway. I liked it just as much the second time around. It's interesting to learn that the writer had newspaper strip experience. These stories play very much like newspaper strip stories. I'd even wondered if they were strip reprints, given the way the first three stories follow each other in sequence.
They're good, solid stories with good, solid artwork. Not world-shaking, but satisfying. In my earlier comment I mentioned that the art looks like how Wilson McCoy's Phantom might have looked had McCoy known how to draw. Morgus' comparison to Fawcett comics is an good one. There is a certain Costanza-shop feel to Furness' drawings.
I don't know why they bothered giving Freelance a costume. He never uses it and he doesn't need it. He's just a straight adventure hero.
I didn't like the last story as much. It reads like a Blackhawk story with Japanese instead of Commies. Good airplane drawings, though. I miss Natasha. Not that she did much in the other stories, but it was fun having Freelance pal around with a Russian secret agent.
One more thing: the second time through I still had trouble with the lettering. Many A's somehow look like R's, and the odd Y's occasionally become U's. However, having just lettered a page for the first time in several years and having it look like *&#@, I don't feel entirely comfortable criticizing Furness' lettering, which is a damn sight better than mine, funny A's and all.