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Evil hides behind the genteel facades of affluent Strivers' Row and stalks the ballroom of one of Harlem's most famous gay parties. In a complex plot that keeps the reader tied to the page, Black Orchid Blues explores the depths of human depravity and the desperation of its victims.
273 pages, ebook
First published February 9, 2011
At six-foot-three, Queenie Lovetree was the tallest badass chanteuse most folks had ever seen. ... many seemed to forget or stubbornly chose to ignore a most salient fact, the one secret that her beauty, no matter how artful, failed to hide: that Queenie Lovetree wasn’t a woman at all, but a man in drag.This is appears at only two pages in, so not a spoiler. Queenie performs at the Cinnamon Club and has been packing in the crowd for about six months. Lanie Price is a society columnist and is at the Cinnamon Club, talking with Queenie and trying to learn more about Queenie who has been very vague about her background. Before the end of the first chapter, a man with a tommy gun rushes into the club, kidnaps Queenie, and leaves a trail of dead and injured behind him.