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Available copies

  • 1 of 2 copies available at LARL/NWRL Consortium.
  • 1 of 2 copies available at Lake Agassiz Regional Library. (Show preferred library)

Current holds

0 current holds with 2 total copies.

Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
Detroit Lakes Public Library HAR (Text) 33500013762513 New Checked out 04/10/2023
Fertile Public Library HAR (Text) 33500013762521 New Available -

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780063274778
  • ISBN: 0063274779
  • Physical Description: 245 pages ; 23 cm
  • Edition: First HarperVia edition.
  • Publisher: New York, NY : HarperVia, an imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers, 2023.

Content descriptions

Summary, etc.:
"In this gripping historical novel, the internationally bestselling author of The Mercies weaves a spellbinding tale of fear, transformation, courage, and love in sixteenth-century France. Set in an era of superstition, hysteria, and extraordinary change, and inspired by true events, The Dance Tree is an impassioned story of family secrets, forbidden love, and women pushed to the edge"-- Provided by publisher.
Strasbourg, 1518. In the midst of a blisteringly hot summer, a lone woman begins to dance in the city square. She dances for days without pause or rest, and when hundreds of other women join her, the men running the city declare a state of emergency and hire musicians to play the Devil out of the mob. Outside the city, pregnant Lisbet lives with her husband and mother-in-law, tending the bees that are the family's livelihood. Though Lisbet is removed from the frenzy of the dancing plague afflicting the city's women, her own quiet life is upended by the arrival of her sister-in-law. Nethe has been away for seven years, serving a penance in the mountains for a crime no one will name. It is a secret Lisbet is determined to uncover. As the city buckles under the beat of a thousand feet, Lisbet becomes caught in a dangerous web of deceit and clandestine passion. Like the women of Strasbourg, she too, is dancing to a dangerous tune...
Reviews

  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2023 February #2
    In 1518, Strasbourg seems punished by God as it is plagued by famine, drought, and suffocating heat. Then, a mania: in the town square, women begin to dance until they collapse, their numbers soon swelling. Heavily pregnant Lisbet has her own troubles. A dozen miscarriages robbed her of hope, and her husband's distance increases with her desperation. Her sister-in-law, Agnethe, returns after years of penance for a mysterious transgression. Lisbet's friend Ida knows Agnethe's "secret," and Ida's husband, a vicious representative of the local council, threatens all. Through visceral but expressive prose, Hargrave (The Mercies, 2020) intersperses Lisbet, Ida, and Agnethe's story with brief backstories for the dancing women. Though the historic dancing plague involved both sexes, Hargrave creates a female-only phenomenon. She explores themes of female subjugation—"where every priest preaches their damnation, where their husbands drag them by the hair and they must drown their children"—along with a secondary focus on sexual and racial persecution. This feminist tale features strong female characterization against the interesting backdrop of a mania the cause of which is still debated 500 years later. Copyright 2023 Booklist Reviews.
  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2023 February #2
    In 1518, Strasbourg seems punished by God as it is plagued by famine, drought, and suffocating heat. Then, a mania: in the town square, women begin to dance until they collapse, their numbers soon swelling. Heavily pregnant Lisbet has her own troubles. A dozen miscarriages robbed her of hope, and her husband's distance increases with her desperation. Her sister-in-law, Agnethe, returns after years of penance for a mysterious transgression. Lisbet's friend Ida knows Agnethe's "secret," and Ida's husband, a vicious representative of the local council, threatens all. Through visceral but expressive prose, Hargrave (The Mercies, 2020) intersperses Lisbet, Ida, and Agnethe's story with brief backstories for the dancing women. Though the historic dancing plague involved both sexes, Hargrave creates a female-only phenomenon. She explores themes of female subjugation—"where every priest preaches their damnation, where their husbands drag them by the hair and they must drown their children"—along with a secondary focus on sexual and racial persecution. This feminist tale features strong female characterization against the interesting backdrop of a mania the cause of which is still debated 500 years later. Copyright 2023 Booklist Reviews.
  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2023 February #2
    In 1518, Strasbourg seems punished by God as it is plagued by famine, drought, and suffocating heat. Then, a mania: in the town square, women begin to dance until they collapse, their numbers soon swelling. Heavily pregnant Lisbet has her own troubles. A dozen miscarriages robbed her of hope, and her husband's distance increases with her desperation. Her sister-in-law, Agnethe, returns after years of penance for a mysterious transgression. Lisbet's friend Ida knows Agnethe's "secret," and Ida's husband, a vicious representative of the local council, threatens all. Through visceral but expressive prose, Hargrave (The Mercies, 2020) intersperses Lisbet, Ida, and Agnethe's story with brief backstories for the dancing women. Though the historic dancing plague involved both sexes, Hargrave creates a female-only phenomenon. She explores themes of female subjugation—"where every priest preaches their damnation, where their husbands drag them by the hair and they must drown their children"—along with a secondary focus on sexual and racial persecution. This feminist tale features strong female characterization against the interesting backdrop of a mania the cause of which is still debated 500 years later. Copyright 2023 Booklist Reviews.
  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2023 February #2
    In 1518, Strasbourg seems punished by God as it is plagued by famine, drought, and suffocating heat. Then, a mania: in the town square, women begin to dance until they collapse, their numbers soon swelling. Heavily pregnant Lisbet has her own troubles. A dozen miscarriages robbed her of hope, and her husband's distance increases with her desperation. Her sister-in-law, Agnethe, returns after years of penance for a mysterious transgression. Lisbet's friend Ida knows Agnethe's "secret," and Ida's husband, a vicious representative of the local council, threatens all. Through visceral but expressive prose, Hargrave (The Mercies, 2020) intersperses Lisbet, Ida, and Agnethe's story with brief backstories for the dancing women. Though the historic dancing plague involved both sexes, Hargrave creates a female-only phenomenon. She explores themes of female subjugation—"where every priest preaches their damnation, where their husbands drag them by the hair and they must drown their children"—along with a secondary focus on sexual and racial persecution. This feminist tale features strong female characterization against the interesting backdrop of a mania the cause of which is still debated 500 years later. Copyright 2023 Booklist Reviews.

Subject: Dance > Fiction.
Demoniac possession > Fiction.
Beekeepers > Fiction.
Pregnant women > Fiction.
Lesbians > Fiction.
Families > Fiction.
Secrecy > Fiction.
Family secrets > Fiction.
Strasbourg (France) > History > 16th century > Fiction.
Genre: Lesbian fiction.
Historical fiction.
Novels.

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