A Story of Self-Discovery

By Beth Schwartzapfel ’01 / January/February 2014
January 7th, 2014

The year is 1782. As the Revolutionary War drags on, a young woman named Deborah Samson sits restlessly doing piecework in a rural Massachusetts tavern, weaving and dreaming of a better life. Her options are slim; a former indentured servant, she’s not only poor and female but also “masterless”—unmarried and not in service to a family. When a recruiter for the Continental Army comes to town, Samson sees her chance. She dons a man’s clothes and enlists.

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Lexi Adams-Woolf '00
Read Q&A here with Alex Meyers on how he fictionalized his ancestor Deborah Samson.
Revolutionary, the spellbinding debut novel by Alex Myers ’03 AM, brings to life the true story of his ancestor, Deborah Samson (later, Gannett), who served for more than a year as one of the elite “lights,” or Light Infantry, of the 4th Massachusetts Regiment, which was headquartered at West Point. Taking the name of her brother Robert Shurtliff, who had died in childhood, Samson earned a reputation as a brave and dedicated soldier. She lived side-by-side with other soldiers, killed several men, and was injured in battle without her gender ever being discovered.

Woven with authentic period detail and language, Revolutionary is a page-turner. What propels the narrative forward is not just the battle scenes and the moments when Robert fears he may be revealed; equally compelling is its story of self-discovery and, eventually, love. Sometimes the character is pulled toward a soldier’s life, other times toward tenderness and motherhood.

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Myers is playful with his pronouns, shifting back and forth between “he” and “she” and “Deborah” and “Robert” as the character’s identity shifts. What might have seemed an awkward sleight of hand instead reveals a complex person coming to self-awareness. “I am divided, apart from myself in so many ways,” Robert writes from West Point to a childhood friend. “I wish I could … float between these selves and keep them whole.”

Myers is transgender, and it’s tempting to attribute the character’s authenticity to the author’s experience living as both a woman and a man. But what makes Revolutionary much more than “a transgender book” is that Deborah’s journey is one that all of us make, as we learn our limits, follow our dreams, and risk everything to be who we are.

Myers discusses Revolutionary in an interview with the BAM.

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Related Issue
January/February 2014