The Whore, The Runaway, And The Fathers of Our Freedom


© Brian Tubbs

If you’re of the opinion that the Patriot Cause of 1775-76 was a sham for the colonial upper-class elite to perpetuate their own interests and that the men recognized today as our “Founding Fathers” were nothing but a gaggle of self-serving egotists, then Paul Lussier has written the book for you!

Recently published and acclaimed in many literary circles, The Last Refuge of Scoundrels is an all-out assault on the patriotic notion that the American War for Independence was for a just cause and that the leaders behind it were of noble intent. Novelist Paul Lussier relentlessly and colorfully paints a dark and chaotic portrait of the American Revolution, beginning with the 1765 Stamp Tax riots on up through France’s decision to send her fleet to trap Cornwallis at Yorktown. All the while, Lussier frames his tale as a sweeping flashback vision granted to a dying George Washington who seeks to regain his humanity by willingly confronting the “truth” of what he presided over.

From his deathbed, Washington sees the life of John Lawrence (who, according to the story, serves as his first aide-de-camp) from his oppressed teenage years under the stern hand of his seedy father to the end. Witnessing the story, as narrated by John Lawrence himself through most of the book, Washington sees the journey of this “common man” from a confused runaway teenager, hopelessly infatuated with a woman named Deborah, to his pivotal role in winning the War for Independence.

Lussier is a talented writer. And the tale he weaves is compelling and absorbing. Centered around John Lawrence, a very fictionalized version of John Laurens (one of George Washington’s real aides-de-camp during the war) and a cross-dressing prostitute named Deborah, another fictionalized caricature of a historically authentic figure, The Last Refuge of Scoundrels seeks to prove the very premise of its title. So committed is the author to this goal that the story takes a few too many twists and turns to be credible, even for a work of fiction. Nevertheless, one can’t help but keep turning the pages as the story Lussier writes – however inconsistent with popular history – draws you in until the very end.

In seeing this tale (the journey of John Lawrence through the chaotic years of the Revolution), Washington – and (hopes Lussier) the reader – learns that the American Revolution was won, not by the “Founding Fathers,” but by “the transvestites, the prostitutes, the blacks, the Indians, [and] the queers!”

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Here's the follow-up discussion on this article: View all related messages

5.   Jul 6, 2001 10:29 PM
In response to message posted by BuckyRea:

Bucky,

This author asserted that roughly one third of the population was strongly ...


-- posted by animalspirit


4.   Jul 4, 2001 3:24 PM
Russ, he certainly seems to have a unique take on the revolutionary period. I'd be surprised if anyone studies this time period and doesn't come out with somewhat of a pro-Washington viewpoint. But so ...

-- posted by BuckyRea


3.   Jul 3, 2001 11:12 PM
Hi Brian,

...Ah, for what it's worth I just caught the last 45 minutes of an appearance by this author on the syndicated radio Jim Bohannon Show. Unfortunately I was unable to locate an onl ...


-- posted by animalspirit


2.   Jul 1, 2001 5:13 PM
In response to message posted by Lynda04:

Indeed, it can be. But in the case of Lussier's book, there's a definite agenda bein ...


-- posted by BrianTubbs


1.   Jul 1, 2001 3:25 PM
Brian - I sometimes think that a fictional account of an event, using a little artistic licence, is a nicer way of learning :-) Taken with a pinch (or bag) of salt, of course :-) ...

-- posted by Lynda04





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