In the second of his John Paul Jones novels, Nicastro tells the story of America's first naval hero during the prime of his spectacular yet tragic career. Commanding his small, bitterly divided squadron deep into enemy waters, Jones must master both the opposition and himself as he joins the battle that will seal his fame. Meanwhile, his former comrade John Severence confronts another, more ominous brand of warfare on the frontiers of colonial New York. Both men are transformed in the crucible of combat, courage, and wartime folly.
Nicholas Nicastro was born in Astoria, New York in 1963. His education includes a B.A. in English from Cornell University (1985), an M.F.A. in filmmaking from New York University (1991), an M.A. in archaeology and a Ph.D in psychology from Cornell (1996 and 2003). He has also worked as a film critic, a hospital orderly, a newspaper reporter, a library archivist, a college lecturer in anthropology and psychology, an animal behaviorist, and an advertising salesman. His writings include short fiction, travel and science articles in such publications as "The New York Times", "The New York Observer", "Film Comment", and "The International Herald Tribune". His books have been published by Penguin, St. Martin's, and HarperCollins.
The second book in Nicastro's novelizations of the career of Captain John Paul Jones of the fledgling American Navy. This one was more interesting than the first for its land-bound digression into General John Sullivan's campaign against the Iroquois, in which Captain Severance suposedly participated.
Half of the novel is narrated by Severance, the other half is narrated by a half-white, half-Iroquois, captive who participated as a landsman volunteer durting the climactic battle of John Paul Jones' career, the contest between the U.S.S. Bon Homme Richard and H.M.S. Serapis. Christened Joseph "Between Two Fires" for having been born between two council fires, this second narrator not only lends his name to Nicastro's book but is also credited with delivering the grenade onto Serapis' main gundeck whose explosion precipitated Captain Pearson of the Serapis' surrender. After the battle, Joseph returns to the ruins of his village in the aftermath of Sullivan's march and encounters Severance, with tragic results.
The real-life grenade thrower was a Scots-American sailor named William Hamilton, as Nicastro takes care to note in his afterward.
Nicastro's characters, new and old, remain unsavory and unsympathetic, and in some cases brutal and barbaric. His description of the Iroquois culture and reaction the white culture is interesting, as is his tale of the origin of the expression "OK", from the Choctaw expression with the same meaning.