October 11, 1864. The Civil War rages on in Kentucky, where Union and
Confederate loyalties have turned neighbors into enemies and once-proud
soldiers into drifters, thieves, and outlaws. Stephen Gano Burbridge,
radical Republican and military commander of the district of Kentucky,
has declared his own war on this new class of marauding guerrillas, and
his weekly executions at Louisville's public commons draw both crowds
and widespread criticism. In this time of fear and division, a Kentucky
journalist created a legend: Sue Mundy, female guerrilla, a "she-devil"
and "tigress" who was leading her band of outlaws across the state in an
orgy of greed and bloodshed. Though the "Sue Mundy" of the papers was
created as an affront to embarrass Union authorities, the man behind the
woman -- twenty-year-old Marcellus Jerome Clarke -- was later brought to
account for "her" crimes. Historians have pieced together clues about
this orphan from southern Kentucky whose idealism and later
disillusionment led him to his fate, but Richard Taylor's work of
imagination makes this history flesh -- an exciting story of the Civil
War told from the perspective of one of its most enigmatic figures. Sue
Mundy opens in 1861, when fifteen-year-old Jerome Clark, called "Jarom,"
leaves everyone he loves -- his aunt, his adopted family, his sweetheart
-- to follow his older cousin into the Confederate infantry. There,
confronted by the hardships of what he slowly understands is a losing
fight, Jarom's romanticized notions of adventure and heroism are crushed
under the burdens of hunger, sleepless nights, and mindless atrocities.
Captured by Union forces and imprisoned in Camp Morton, Jarom makes a
daring escape, crossing the Ohio River under cover of darkness and
finding refuge and refreshed patriotic zeal first in Adam R. Johnson's
Tenth Kentucky Calvary, then among General John Hunt Morgan's infamous
brigade. Morgan's shocking death in 1864 proves a bad omen for the
Confederate cause, as members of his group of raiders scatter -- some to
rejoin organized forces, others, like Jarom, to opt for another, less
civilized sort of warfare. Displaced and desperate for revenge, Jarom
and his band of Confederate deserters wreak havoc in Kentucky: a rampage
of senseless murder and thievery in an uncertain quest to inflict
punishment on Union sympathizers. Long-locked and clean-shaven, Jarom is
mistakenly labeled female by the media -- but Sue Mundy is about more
than the transformation of a man into a woman, and then a legend.
Ironically, Sue Mundy becomes the persona by which Jarom's darkest self
is revealed, and perhaps redeemed.