P.S. Burn This Letter Please cover art

P.S. Burn This Letter Please

The Fabulous and Fraught Birth of Modern Drag, in the Queens' Own Words

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About this listen

With an introduction from RuPaul's Drag Race winner Sasha Velour

Their greatest act of resistance was simply existing

In the 1950s, as now, queer people were attracted to the Big Apple because they were able to find work as drag performers and female impersonators in a small number of Lower East Side clubs. 

Decades before Stonewall, they occupied the margins of society, determined to live as they pleased, despite of the attentions of the police. Sometimes reduced to stealing to get their costumes, these girls were unstoppable, fearless and fabulous.

When a cache of their letters were discovered, these individuals were given a voice where they had traditionally been silenced. The letters they wrote bear witness to a time when gay community was hard to find.

Blending social, political and cultural history with memoir, this book is an unforgettable and deeply moving encounter with a generation of incredible survivors and a necessary account of how modern drag culture was born.

A note on our narrator: Tony Casey - The Established, Shanda Leer - takes inspiration from queer icons like Oscar Wilde, Lily Savage, and Carol Burnett, and has developed his career and artistry thanks to the paths laid out by queer people and performers as those captured in these powerful letters.

©2023 Craig Olsen (P)2023 Hachette Audio UK
Americas Biographies & Memoirs Gay Studies LGBTQ+ Studies LGBTQIA+ Creators Letters & Correspondence Memoirs, Diaries & Correspondence United States LGBTQIA+
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