Hillary's biographer,
Denis Richards, writes that the book and its author met with instant acclaim, although the book was unusual in the depth of its storytelling: The author was acclaimed not only as a natural writer, but also as a representative of the doomed youth of his generation, although in his constant self-analysis he was in fact a most untypical British fighter pilot of 1940. In the preface for the book's first edition in 1942
J. B. Priestley wrote: "
The Last Enemy differs from all other books about the R.A.F. because its author, Richard Hillary, is by temperament and inclination, and to some extent training, a writer. ... The value of this book lies in the fact that it is a statement of a fully articulate young man about life in a Service which is generally inarticulate. Richard Hillary happens to be a kind of young man who doesn't often find his way into the R.A.F. He is in my view a born writer." ==References==