Most Americans learn the Revolution as a story set in a narrow strip of land from Boston to Yorktown. The familiar images are Boston Harbor, Lexington Green, Independence Hall, Washington at Valley Forge and Cornwallis’s surrender in Virginia. Sugar islands, Jewish merchants, slave revolts and French arsenals in the Caribbean seldom appear on that stage.
In Pursuit of Happiness, Sheldon Greene keeps all the famous events in view. Washington’s crossing of the Delaware and the Christmas Eve attack on the Hessians are part of the mental landscape of his characters. So are the early actions of the Marines and the French king’s crucial arms assistance. What he does differently is to shift the main camera south, onto a Caribbean island where sugar and slavery are the everyday reality. From that angle, the war for American independence looks less like a clean origin myth and more like one episode in a much wider and more compromised struggle.
Sheldon Greene sets Pursuit of Happiness in motion on St Catherine’s, a volcanic Caribbean sugar island under British rule. The book begins on the island itself, in the world of cane fields, plantations and garrison life, before its characters move by sea and land into the larger theatre of the Revolution. Joshua, the central figure, comes out of Philadelphia. He is a Quaker from a pacifist religious tradition, drawn into the world of trade and politics that links Philadelphia to the Caribbean and to the wider Atlantic economy. Through his eyes, St Catherine’s, the mainland and the Atlantic blockade become parts of a single story.
St Catherine’s is a fictional construction, but the social and economic structures that shape it are not. The island is dominated by cane fields and mills, a planter elite, a British garrison, and a population of enslaved Africans whose labor feeds a global sugar market.
The novel places the reader in this world early and without romantic filter. Ballrooms and drawing rooms sit only a few steps away from the quarters and fields where enslaved people live and work. Planters drink and debate policy while men, women and children cut cane under the sun. British officers worry about supply and discipline while the ground they stand on is worked by people who have no legal personhood.
By building a fictional island out of real historical patterns, Greene concentrates several strands of history that are often scattered. British imperial policy, French influence, Jewish trading networks, abolitionist sentiment and slave resistance all occupy the same stage. St Catherine’s is imagined, but the world that sustains it is taken from the historical record.
The novel never lets the reader forget that the Revolution unfolded on top of an economy built on forced labor. The sugar plantations of the Caribbean poured wealth into European coffers. That wealth in turn paid for armies, navies and subsidies in North America. The rhetoric of liberty in one part of the Atlantic rested on unfreedom in another.
In Pursuit of Happiness, this is not an abstract assertion. It is the daily environment of the characters. Parties are illuminated by candles that burn because enslaved people have harvested the material and prepared the rooms. Elaborate dresses worn by planter women are juxtaposed with the bare feet of a boy who slips into the room for a scrap of food. A conversation about strategy between officers or merchants takes place against the constant, taken for granted background of cane, sweat and punishment.
Joshua’s presence makes the tension sharper. As a Quaker he is raised in a pacifist tradition that mistrusts violence. As a revolutionary he is committed to the armed struggle for independence. As a visitor from Philadelphia he is an outsider on St Catherine’s. He can see both the attraction of the planter class and the moral rot under its surface. The book asks the reader to sit with that discomfort rather than wave it away.
One of the strengths of the novel is the way it treats the war as a global project. Greene draws on the well documented role of French support for the American cause, especially through covert arms shipments that ran through Caribbean ports before reaching the mainland.
Joshua does not simply march from battle to battle. He moves through the networks that make battles possible. The struggle for independence takes place not only on fields in New Jersey and Virginia, but in harbors, countinghouses and salons. Arms must be moved from French control through the Caribbean and then through a British naval blockade to reach Philadelphia.
Greene uses this logistical problem to highlight another often hidden aspect of the war: the role of Jewish merchants and captains. Jewish traders in Philadelphia and in the Caribbean, along with other colonial merchants, are involved in financing and routing the arms. They participate in the Revolution not only as abstract symbols of diversity but as shipowners and intermediaries whose choices matter. Their presence fits the archival record, yet popular memory rarely gives them space.
All of this is filtered through Joshua’s imagination. For him, Washington’s winter crossing of the Delaware and the attack on the Hessian camp are not distant textbook illustrations. They are live points of comparison, measures of courage and risk, as he contemplates the dangers of slipping past British ships with a hold of contraband weapons. In his mind the Delaware, St Catherine’s, Cap Francais and the Atlantic blockade form a single theatre.
American legend often carries the Marines’ early actions in a glow of inevitability. In Greene’s telling, their first battle off St Catherine’s is anything but neat. The landing is messy, the men nervous, the outcome far from guaranteed. Joshua worries less about his own death than about the shame and consequences of failure. Officers squint through smoke and spray. Orders can barely be heard over cannon and waves.
On the British side, officers see their own wounded and dead. They struggle to maintain order as the assault unfolds. The island’s defenders are not caricatures. They are participants in an imperial system that feels natural to them and monstrous to others.
By writing the battle from ground level rather than from a patriotic distance, Greene strips away some of the filter that often distorts Revolutionary War storytelling. Bravery is real. So are confusion, miscommunication and luck. The effect is to bring the Revolution’s violence down from pedestal to human scale.
The figure of Benedict Arnold appears in Pursuit of Happiness not only as a villain to be condemned, but as a man whose loyalties and motives are complex. Greene allows Arnold a romance and an inner life, drawing on gaps in the historical record to imagine conversations and choices that might have taken place. Pursuit of Happiness does not excuse treason, but it refuses to treat it as something that can be fully explained by a single label.
In the context of the Revolution, that means thinking about betrayal, principle and self-interest at multiple levels. Arnold’s choices are one instance. So are the choices of planters on St Catherine’s whose livelihoods depend on slavery, and of revolutionaries who accept Caribbean suffering as the price of European aid. By weaving Arnold into a story that already includes a Caribbean island and a Quaker protagonist, Greene suggests that questions about loyalty and betrayal belong to the entire Atlantic world, not only to one famous name.
Sheldon Greene ties the political and military strands of Pursuit of Happiness** to a love story that refuses to stay in the background. Joshua’s relationship with Amelia, the wife of a planter, crosses lines of class, religion and nation. Amelia begins the book inside the plantation elite. Over time she is pulled toward Joshua and toward a different vision of what a decent life might be.
Their reunion on the road, under cover of darkness and surrounded by fleeing slaves and marching Marines, is one of the most striking scenes in the novel. Joshua nearly fires on a group of people escaping the plantation before he recognizes Amelia’s voice. The embrace that follows is witnessed by soldiers who have their own reasons for cheering. It is not simply a romantic payoff. It is a moment in which competing ideas of happiness, property and belonging collide in two human bodies.
By keeping the love story entangled with questions of war and slavery, Greene avoids the temptation to let “pursuit of happiness” become a private, apolitical phrase. For Joshua and Amelia, happiness has to be worked out in relation to the lives around them. For the enslaved characters whose paths cross theirs, pursuit of happiness is not a slogan in a preamble. It is a question of literal freedom of movement and survival.
What is gained by looking at the American Revolution from St Catherine’s rather than only from Boston or Philadelphia?
First, it forces a reckoning with slavery and Caribbean economics as central rather than peripheral. The war was fought in the name of liberty, yet depended on systems that denied liberty to large numbers of people. Keeping that contradiction in view does not cancel the achievements of the Revolution. It makes them more honest.
Second, it restores the roles of Jewish traders, Caribbean ports and maritime campaigns to the story’s geography. Independence was not won only on farmland and village greens. It was also won and lost in harbors, countinghouses and colonial assemblies scattered around the Atlantic.
Third, it reminds readers that America’s founding conflict was part of a broader crisis in European and global politics. An old order was cracking. The new one that emerged was not pure. It carried forward many of the structures and injustices that had supported the old.
Historical scholarship and documentary filmmakers have been moving in this direction for years, widening the frame of the Revolution to include enslaved people, Native nations, women and foreign powers. Pursuit of Happiness meets that work on the level of narrative rather than analysis. It allows readers to inhabit a version of the eighteenth century in which a sugar island, a Quaker revolutionary, Jewish trading networks and a group of Marines on a beach all belong in the same picture.
For readers who have absorbed the standard versions of the Revolution, Greene’s novel offers a different way in. It does not argue with dates and troop counts. It asks a simpler but harder question: what does the pursuit of happiness mean when viewed from the yard of a Caribbean plantation, from the deck of a ship slipping past a blockade, or from the mind of a young man who wants both justice and a life worth living.
More of Sheldon Greene’s reflections on law, history and fiction are available on his Substack: https://sheldongreenee.substack.com/