RED LIGHT GIRLS
Frontier Brothels and the Disposable Women of the American West
By David Malcolm Llewellyn
The Wild West was never as glamorous as we were told.
Behind the piano music and velvet curtains stood a harsher reality - one built on gender imbalance, debt contracts, disease, political hypocrisy, and the relentless economics of exploitation.
In Red Light Girls, David Malcolm Llewellyn dismantles the romantic myth of the frontier saloon girl and exposes the structural machinery that sustained brothels in America's boomtowns. Using The Broken Lantern Protocol(TM), this unflinching investigation moves beyond Hollywood imagery to reveal:
- How extreme male-to-female ratios in mining and railroad towns created explosive demand
- The deceptive recruitment networks that funneled immigrant women west
- The brutal ledger systems that trapped women in perpetual debt
- Mercury treatments, untreated syphilis, and the biological toll of vice districts
- Alcohol quotas and violence inside parlor walls
- Municipal crackdowns fueled as much by political optics as moral concern
- The forgotten endings - poorhouses, asylums, unmarked graves
This is not a story of lace and laughter.
It is a structural autopsy of an industry that treated women as depreciating assets in towns built to extract everything - gold, silver, timber, and bodies.
If you think you know the Wild West, think again.
Editorial Reviews
¿¿¿¿¿ "A brutal corrective to Hollywood's velvet fantasy. Llewellyn doesn't romanticize - he dissects. This is frontier history without anesthesia." - Caroline Meade, Western Historical Review
¿¿¿¿¿ "Meticulously structured and emotionally devastating. The ledger pages alone will haunt you. Required reading for anyone who believes the saloon girl myth." - Thomas R. Kellerman, Author of Dust and Dominion
¿¿¿¿¿ "This book replaces the piano music with the sound of accounting - and the result is unforgettable." - Silvia Vargas, American Social History Journal
¿¿¿¿¿ "Unflinching and rigorously argued. Red Light Girls strips the glamour from the American West and forces us to confront the cost." - Frontier Studies Quarterly