
Now We Are Enemies by Thomas J Fleming
Fifty years ago, reviewers across America hailed "Now We Are Enemies" as a masterpiece. It still remains the most complete account of the clash that changed the course of America historythe battle of Bunker Hill. It was the first book about the battle in almost 100 yearsand it marked the emergence of an author who has become widely acknowledged as the best historian of the American Revolution writing today. The books readability wasand still isvividly clear from the opening pages. Suddenly in the empty streets of Charlestown there were moving figures. In single file fifty men hugged the dark sides of the vacant houses, stopping every few feet to listen for the sound of a hostile footstep. Across the harbor in Boston, three British major generals conferred on a plan to destroy the impromptu American army that has been besieging them. The dramas appeal swiftly expands from suspense to profoundly human dimensions. We meet privates, sergeants, lieutenants, colonels and generals fro