Dean Snow is Professor Emeritus of Anthropology at Penn State University and past president of the Society for American Archaeology. His previous books include Archaeology of Native North America and The Iroquois.
Dean Snow breathes new life into a story usually told simply in terms of troop movements, military strategy, and political aftermaths. Snow's account of the military aspects of this campaign is flawless, but it is his sensitivity to the emotional aspects that makes this book a must-read for all readers of the era. He takes us beyond the familiar statistics of the battlefield, beyond the strategic mistakes and successes, and beyond the political consequences of Burgoyne's surrender; he helps us see the meaning of this moment in the lives of the men and women who were there. --Carol Berkin, author of <em>The Bill of Rights: The Fight to Secure America's Liberties</em> Dean Snow has written a wonderful book, a veritable primer on how to write a history of a military campaign or battle. Snow's lucid and engrossing writing transports readers to the site of the pivotal collision between the British and American armies at Saratoga. Readers will understand the day-by-day dilemmas and decisions of the commanders and the daily lives of the men they commanded. So good is Snow's writing that readers may think they smell the scent of battle, feel shuddering bombardments, experience the heart-pounding sensations of men under fire, and agonize with the luckless wounded. <em>1777</em> is a very good book. --John Ferling, author of <em>Whirlwind: The American Revolution and the War That Won It</em> Dean Snow's book <em>1777</em> offers a splendid account of the Saratoga campaign. Its reconstruction of the battles focuses on more than strategy, tactics, and military forces-indeed, it gives an extraordinary account of the actions of the armies, not just day by day, but hour by hour. Just as impressive in the book's coverage are the stories it offers of participants-common soldiers of both armies, their officers, and many of the families that took part, sometimes in the action itself. Both armies receive careful and detailed attention, thereby making this account balanced and fair-minded in every respect. --Robert Middlekauff, author of <em>Washington's Revolution: The Making of America's First Leader</em> As the action builds and the characters come into focus, readers will get caught up in their hopes and frustrations... [and] military history lovers will appreciate Snow's explanations of how battles are fought. --<em>Kirkus Reviews</em> In his latest book, Snow takes a magnifying glass to the Saratoga campaign... [He] presents Horatio Gates and John Burgoyne not as competing chess players but as complex individuals immersed in a larger group of individuals who struggle with social politics, ambiguous authority structures, and subordinates with mixed motives and loyalties... Snow's narrative keeps readers engaged, start to finish. --<em>Library Journal</em> Borrowing from a rich storehouse of letters and diaries preserved by families and historian/aficionados, Snow creates an indelible image of what it was like to be in a campaign that forever changed the soldiers and the land they lived on. --<em>Electric Review</em> An exceptionally detailed narrative, following events day by day and, as the action intensifies, hour by hour. This chronological structure has the merit of making sense of a campaign for which the evidence is often complex and contradictory. The result is a vivid, almost novelistic, account. --<em>Wall Street Journal</em>