Whitney Hamilton's Blog: Firefly - A Civil War Blog
March 3, 2014
Firefly's origins
Firefly originated as a stage play back in 1998. It was produced off-broadway by the Oberon Theater Company in New York City in 2001 under the title UNION. We had a three week run under the direction of Emily Tetzlaff and the houses were packed. We got great reviews and there was a promise that the show might move to a bigger theatre and then...9/11 happened and everything stopped. During the run of the show a Literary agent happened to be in the audience. Since I was playing "Henry" onstage, she patiently waited until I was out of costume. She was in tears and said that the story would make a great book and would I consider turning it into a novel. I was a playwright and had never written a novel before but I gave it my best shot and that is how the book was born.
https://www.facebook.com/UnionMovie/p...
https://www.facebook.com/UnionMovie/p...
Published on March 03, 2014 06:37
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Tags:
civil-war-history, lgbtq, new-york-city-theater, transgender, women-at-war
February 13, 2014
Firefly gets a great Kirkus review
KIRKUS REVIEW
A sharply crafted, post-bellum epic of love, fidelity and gender switching, from playwright Hamilton.
During the Civil War, five brothers lose their lives at the battle of Bull Run. Hamilton draws the grindingly horrific few days with the detailed clarity of an American Heritage map: crisp, transporting and smart with color—“The smoke from gunfire formed a sulfuric miasma about the men—a kind of death shroud that protects as well as prepares.” After the news gets back to the affluent family in Charleston, Hamilton elegantly shifts the family’s life course. Perhaps accustomed to having their way, the two sisters who remain at home will each assume the identity of one of their brothers: Grace becomes Henry, and Louise becomes Will. Another devastated family enters the picture, led by a woman named Virginia, who was blinded by warfare. Duped into an extraordinary dance of affection, she falls in love with “Henry” and “he” with her. Hamilton sure-handedly conveys the blindness of love as well as the war-related atrocities visited upon the South, while interweaving an array of threads: death letters, outlaws, piano playing, how to make soil work, how the blind may hear the soul, honeysuckle and wild crocus during wartime. Amid the “ripened corn stained with fresh blood,” children are born and children die, as in a scene readers may have seen elsewhere that features the suffocation of child who might give away a hiding place. Hamilton’s writing has a way with grief, and what better subjects than war and its debris to reveal it?
A heart-wrenching, moving tale that’s achingly believable.
https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-re...
A sharply crafted, post-bellum epic of love, fidelity and gender switching, from playwright Hamilton.
During the Civil War, five brothers lose their lives at the battle of Bull Run. Hamilton draws the grindingly horrific few days with the detailed clarity of an American Heritage map: crisp, transporting and smart with color—“The smoke from gunfire formed a sulfuric miasma about the men—a kind of death shroud that protects as well as prepares.” After the news gets back to the affluent family in Charleston, Hamilton elegantly shifts the family’s life course. Perhaps accustomed to having their way, the two sisters who remain at home will each assume the identity of one of their brothers: Grace becomes Henry, and Louise becomes Will. Another devastated family enters the picture, led by a woman named Virginia, who was blinded by warfare. Duped into an extraordinary dance of affection, she falls in love with “Henry” and “he” with her. Hamilton sure-handedly conveys the blindness of love as well as the war-related atrocities visited upon the South, while interweaving an array of threads: death letters, outlaws, piano playing, how to make soil work, how the blind may hear the soul, honeysuckle and wild crocus during wartime. Amid the “ripened corn stained with fresh blood,” children are born and children die, as in a scene readers may have seen elsewhere that features the suffocation of child who might give away a hiding place. Hamilton’s writing has a way with grief, and what better subjects than war and its debris to reveal it?
A heart-wrenching, moving tale that’s achingly believable.

https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-re...
Firefly - A Civil War Blog
Writing about all things Civil War, especially women who fought both in disguise and out. I also attend Civil War reenactments and I will blog about my experiences of embedding as a soldier at various
Writing about all things Civil War, especially women who fought both in disguise and out. I also attend Civil War reenactments and I will blog about my experiences of embedding as a soldier at various events. And, of course, I will write about Henry and Virginia here and anything pertaining to the book. Thanks for stopping by!
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