The Dance Tree
The BBC Between the Covers Book Club Pick
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
The gripping historical novel from Kiran Millwood Hargrave, Sunday Times bestselling author of The Mercies. The perfect book club read, as seen on BBC Two's Between the Covers.
‘Exceptionally brilliant. Sensual, compelling’ – Marian Keyes, author Again, Rachel
Set in an era of superstition and hysteria, and inspired by the true events of a doomed summer, The Dance Tree is an impassioned story of family secrets, forbidden love, and women pushed to the edge . . .
Strasbourg, 1518. Lisbet is pregnant, and frightened she will lose this child, too, when the arrival of a stranger upends her world, and promises to change her understanding of love forever.
Ida’s life seems simple – she is married, her family fully formed – but a buried secret threatens to destroy her peaceful existence.
Nethe has just returned from years in exile, punishment for a crime no one will name.
As a mysterious dance plague takes hold of the city, all three women become entangled in a web of deceit and clandestine passion that has them dancing to a dangerous tune.
‘Intriguing, haunting, beautiful’ – Jennifer Saint, author of Ariadne
'I absolutely loved this book' – Elodie Harper, author of The Wolf Den
‘Extraordinary, enthralling’ – Sunday Times
APPLE BOOKS REVIEW
From the author: I first heard of the 1518 dancing plague in 2016. A brief Atlas Obscura article about the largest ever event of choreomania: hundreds of people dancing uncontrollably and without rest in the Strasbourg streets, many dying of heat exhaustion, was such a strong visual image for me and led me down a rabbit hole of research. But I was already midway through several other projects, and could’t commit the time to write the story I knew was brewing. Three years later, with my debut novel The Mercies written, I knew the dancing plague was the perfect backdrop for my next story. In the intervening years it had been permeating my thinking. I was preparing to write this book long before I sat down to the blank page.
In this process of thinking and discovery, a woman stepped from the shadows of the Black Forest that surrounds Strasbourg. In that unexplainable alchemical way characters do, she told me her name was Lisbet, and she was pregnant. She lived with her husband Henne and mother-in-law Sophey on a beekeeping farm on the outskirts of the city. It was her story I was telling. I’ve never had a character change under my fingertips the way Lisbet did. I knew I wanted it to be about desire, friendship, longing and love. She was living at a turning point in history: the Holy Roman Empire was crumbling and the Ottoman Turks were advancing. The resultant war was flooding central Europe with refugees and racism was rife. Climate change was ruining crops and bringing drought. The parallels felt unavoidable. While writing The Dance Tree, I lost six pregnancies. It’s impossible to go through that sort of grief without being transformed, so the book transformed too. In many ways the story became a repository for all the things I couldn’t say aloud because they were too raw, too angry, too bitter. But they also helped me to process those, and I’ve become a better writer because of it.”
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Hargrave's overwrought latest (after The Mercies) takes place in the sweltering European summer of 1518, when a slew of women danced in the central square of Strasbourg for months. The craze begins with Lisbet, a beekeeper who is determined to see her latest pregnancy through after a series of miscarriages. Her husband, Henne, leaves home for Heidelberg to keep their bees from being confiscated by the local monastery, just as Lisbet's sister-in-law, Nethe, returns after seven years at a secluded abbey in the mountains, penance for an unnamed sin. Only Lisbet's friend Ida, married to a cruel and vengeful man, and Nethe know about Lisbet's dance tree, deep in the forest, where ribbons flutter for each of the children she has lost. Secrets are revealed, and things spiral dangerously out of control for Lisbet after an increasing number of women take to dancing themselves into oblivion in the city, prompting two musicians to attempt to cast the devil out of them with their music. Sometimes Hargrave's prose soars, but more often its excessive floridity undercuts the story's drama. Readers will have a hard time finding their way into this one.