In the unforgiving winter of 1781, as the American Revolution struggles in the South, two very different commanders are on a collision course. On one side is the ruthless and ambitious British Lieutenant Colonel Banastre Tarleton, who believes that speed and overwhelming force can crush the rebellion. Opposing him is the ailing but brilliant Brigadier General Daniel Morgan, a master of unconventional warfare who understands both the land and his diverse forces of Continental regulars and militia. The narrative details Morgan's calculated retreat, which draws Tarleton into a perfectly orchestrated trap at the Battle of Cowpens.
The story continues as the war turns from the backcountry to the final, desperate struggle at Yorktown. The book follows the campaigns of General Nathanael Greene, who, with his forces, leads a war of attrition that eventually forces a decisive confrontation. Meanwhile, Lord Charles Cornwallis, driven by a desire for a glorious victory, finds himself pushed to his limits and eventually trapped at Yorktown due to a strategic blunder and the arrival of an "unseen fleet" of French naval power. The story culminates with the Siege of Yorktown and the ultimate defeat and surrender of Cornwallis, but also touches on the lives of those caught in the conflict—from the loyalists whose worlds are shattered to the enslaved people who see the revolution as a whisper of hope for their own freedom.