Book Launch Spring 2026 Releases

Militarybooks

Corporal
Official Vendor
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Jul 20, 2010
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UPCOMING RELEASE ALERT! Please share!

We are debuting our Spring 2026 lineup! Next up: "Retreat from Victory: The Battle of Malvern Hill and the End of the Seven Days" by Francis Augustin O'Reilly.

Two decades in the making, the book draws on hundreds of primary sources—many previously unused—including official records, diaries, newspapers, and regimental histories. O'Reilly's sound and reasoned conclusions are grounded in his deep archival research and keen understanding of the complex terrain.

Click here and then "Add to Wishlist" to make sure that you don't miss the release of this upcoming book! https://tinyurl.com/44prtmbz

Click over for a visit: www.savasbeatie.com

1762268197 copy.jpg
 
UPCOMING RELEASE ALERT! Please share!

We are debuting our Spring 2026 lineup! Next up: "Retreat from Victory: The Battle of Malvern Hill and the End of the Seven Days" by Francis Augustin O'Reilly.

Two decades in the making, the book draws on hundreds of primary sources—many previously unused—including official records, diaries, newspapers, and regimental histories. O'Reilly's sound and reasoned conclusions are grounded in his deep archival research and keen understanding of the complex terrain.

Click here and then "Add to Wishlist" to make sure that you don't miss the release of this upcoming book! https://tinyurl.com/44prtmbz

Click over for a visit: www.savasbeatie.com

View attachment 567429
One of the most anticipated ACW books in years. I know I've been monitoring this for well more than a decade. It got to the point where I wasn't certain we'd ever see it and then a terrific publisher who knows how to identify real quality and market it jumped in. We win ...
 
We are debuting our Spring 2026 lineup! Next up: "Retreat from Victory: The Battle of Malvern Hill and the End of the Seven Days" by Francis Augustin O'Reilly.

Is this primarily a tactical study of the one-day battle, or is there also a significant analysis of the aftermath of the battle (Harrison's Landing, etc)?

O'Reilly's book about Fredericksburg was 2/3 about the titular battle and 1/3 about the rest of Burnside's period commanding the army which did a good job putting the battle in context. The two books have a similar page count.
 
Is this primarily a tactical study of the one-day battle, or is there also a significant analysis of the aftermath of the battle (Harrison's Landing, etc)?

O'Reilly's book about Fredericksburg was 2/3 about the titular battle and 1/3 about the rest of Burnside's period commanding the army which did a good job putting the battle in context. The two books have a similar page count.
Yes, it is both.
 

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