New Release: Scott Mingus, “Flames Beyond Gettysburg”

18 02 2011

Yesterday’s mail brought the new Savas Beatie edition of Scott Mingus’s Flames Beyond Gettysburg: The Confederate Expedition to the Susquehanna River, June 1863.  Originally this was published in 2009 with the subtitle The Gordon Expedition, June 1863.  But be not fooled – this is a completely revised edition with new maps and photos. Scott is a long time Gettysburg geek and miniature wargamer and an e-quaintance for a number of years, and I know he worked long and hard to get this book written and published. See Scott’s website for the book here, and see his wargaming blog here.

The book is 338 pages of text, with various appendices including a chronology (I think a chronology is as essential as Orders of Battle, which this book also has), and driving tours.  Scott consulted a number of manuscript sources and newspapers in researching Flames. Footnotes are honest-to-God footnotes.

From the back cover:

…a study of a fascinating but largely overlooked operation by part of Richard Ewell’s Second Corps in June 1863 that not only shaped the course of the Gettysburg Campaign, but may well have altered the course of our nation’s history.


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4 responses

18 02 2011
Ted Savas

Thanks for posting this, Harry. We appreciate it.

Scott did a great job and we are very proud to add this title to our growing library of Gettysburg studies.

Theodore P. Savas
Savas Beatie LLC

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18 02 2011
Drew Wagenhoffer

Harry,
I agree about chronologies. What an unsung feature. Very few books include one but they are always welcome.

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20 02 2011
Eric Ludy

Thanks for the information Harry. This is a part of the Gettysburg campaign that I’ve always wanted to learn more about. Looking forward to reading this book at some point!

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2 03 2011
Scott Mingus

Thanks everyone for the very kind words! Flames tells the story of a long-overlooked part of the Gettysburg Campaign and focuses on how Pennsylvanians reacted to the thousands of Confederates marching through the region. I balanced the Union, Confederate, and civilian accounts to try to paint a vivid word picture from all vantage points.

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