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In this recently discovered packet of 19th Century correspondence
between brother and sister Albert and Elsie Devereaux of
Clarksville, Tennessee, Nashville musician and writer Tommy Womack
presents the solid proof that the Lavender Boys - an all gay
Confederate regiment - really did exist, did fight and did indeed
put on one hell of a Christmas show. Albert, a 20-year-old
Confederate soldier, is a homesick closeted homosexual living in an
era most unkind to any gay male no matter what room he's in. Albert
survives the horrors of Shiloh and proves himself to his fellow
soldiers. He rises to the rank of Captain, his secret safe, while
consistently being the right gay man in the right gay place at the
right gay time. Albert' sister Elsie, seven years older, lives back
home with their hostile stepfamily, the Jansches. Always prone to
hearing voices, Elsie's grip on reality unravels over the course of
their letters, with grisly, murderous consequences. The letters end
with Albert's death at the battle of Gettysburg, leaving historians
to ponder the true motives behind Pickett's suicidal charge, and
whether Robert E. Lee knowingly sacrificed the lives of thousands
of men just to eradicate existence - and any evidence - of the one
regiment in his army that knew how to properly accessorize.
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