Andrew Waters is a writer, editor, and conservationist residing in Spartanburg, South Carolina. He is the editor of three slave narrative collections. As a land conservationist, he has facilitated the preservation of over 20,000 acres in the Carolinas. Currently, he is pursuing his PhD in parks and recreation management at Clemson University.
""...offers the reader an important understanding of the brutality of war and the reasons for the veneration of both Greene and Sumter in the South...""-- ""Quaker History"" ""Waters's text provides a detailed overview of the Southern Campaign and presents interesting portraits of these two military leaders.""-- ""Journal of Early American History"" ""Scholars will find it illuminating, as it provides detail that is necessarily missing from broader studies. For general readers and those who simply enjoy military history, the book provides an easy-to-follow narrative of the major events while making a cogent, scholarly argument. The sources are both appropriate and illustrative.""-- ""History: Reviews of New Books"" ""Waters has ably mined the Papers of Nathanael Greene to author a very readable narrative of the southern campaign that will certainly appeal to Revolutionary War enthusiasts... Waters is an able writer with a keen eye for historical detail.""-- ""Journal of Southern History"" ""...a very easy read that is great for anyone teaching leadership either for the military or business executives.""-- ""Military Review"" ""Andrew Waters has written an interesting case study of the interplay between two very different personalities working toward the same goal, but seldom in harmony or even in a spirit of friendship.""-- ""The Journal of America's Military Past"" ""...narrow focus in time and geography provides the opportunity to examine several battles that rarely rate more than a brief mention in books that take a larger view, among them the battles of Hobkirk's Hill, Ninety-Six, and other, smaller conflicts.""-- ""Journal of the American Revolution"" ""A brilliant account of the military campaigns and collaborations between Greene and Sumter""-- ""The Colonial Review"" ""An engaging biography of Nathanael Greene and Thomas Sumter""-- ""SirReadaLot.org"" ""Meticulously researched and exceptionally well written, organized and presented.""-- ""Midwest Book Review"" ''In The Quaker and the Gamecock, Andrew Waters tells an engaging story, though one familiar to many readers of the American Revolution. His focus on command relations, however, provides an interesting angle. He also nimbly juggles his historical characters without creating confusion, an easy mistake he could have made with such strong personalities. His unnecessary and jarring passing references to President Trump and modern terrorism aside, this is a well-written and useful book for understanding the war in the South. 8/10.''-- ""Wargames Illustrated""