Synopsis
The month is February in the year 1807. The place is Weybridge, Vermont: small, cold, lonely, and beautiful. Sylvia Drake is exhausted. As an unwed woman with few prospects, she is residing with and caring for her sister’s rambunctious family. Today the house is abuzz awaiting a guest—Charity Bryant. A friend of the family, she is most known for her elegant letters, with their swoopy and evocative penmanship and carefully chosen prose. But Charity’s visit is a guise, she is coming to Vermont to start over after heartbreak and rumours—so many rumours—that have grown too loud back in Massachusetts.
Being openly gay in 19th century New England is not an easy row to hoe. But Charity can only be herself, and she immediately catches—and holds—the eye of none other than Sylvia Drake. From this point on, for 44 years, the two would be inseparable, building a life together despite all odds and living as a lesbian couple in small town Vermont.
From: Drawn & Quarterly
Notes on This Title
This title tells the story of two queer woman living in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.
Awards
None.
Reviews
Starred Review: “A compelling and emotionally precise work that expands the scope of queer historical narratives by focusing on longevity rather than secrecy or tragedy.” (Source: Library Journal)
Starred Review: “A timeless story of marriage, well-grounded in queer history. An absolute triumph.” (Source: Kirkus Reviews)
Interviews
None.