Revolutionary War buffs will be intrigued by this meticulous, narrowly focused account of the two years following British Army general Charles Cornwallis’s surrender to Continental Army commander-in-chief George Washington in October 1781. University of Central Florida professor Head (Privateers of the Americas) explains that, with peace under negotiation in Paris, British forces still occupied New York City, and 10,000 Continental troops “stood duty” in the vicinity of Newburgh, York. During the winter of 1782–1783, army officers grew anxious about their pensions, which had been promised by Congress but were now in doubt because the country was “deeply in debt” and taxes were “deeply unpopular.” An officer, later revealed to be Maj. John Armstrong Jr., distributed an anonymous letter calling for the army to defy orders to either disband (if peace came) or fight (if war resumed).