9780785261810
The Dead Don't Dance: A Novel of Awakening share button
Charles Martin
Format Paperback
Dimensions 4.84 (w) x 8.92 (h) x 0.72 (d)
Pages 320
Publisher Nelson, Thomas, Inc.
Publication Date May 2004
ISBN 9780785261810
Book ISBN 10 0785261818
About Book

A sleepy rural town in South Carolina. The end of summer and a baby about to be born. But in the midst of hope and celebration comes unexpected tragedy, and Dylan Styles must come to terms with how much he's lost. Will the music of his heart be stilled forever—or will he choose to dance with life once more, in spite of sorrow and heartbreak?

The Dead Don't Dance is a bittersweet yet triumphant love story—a tale of one man's spiritual journey through the darkness of despair and into the light of hope.

Reviews

Publishers Weekly

Competent writing and a poignant plot combine to make Martin's first novel with newcomer fiction imprint WestBow an absorbing read for fans of faith-based fiction. In rural South Carolina, Maggie and Dylan expectantly await the birth of their first child. Tragedy strikes when their son is stillborn and Maggie slips into a long-term coma. Refusing to give up on her recovery, a devastated Dylan marks time earning money as an adjunct English professor at Digger Junior College. In a role vaguely reminiscent of the teachers in Mr. Holland's Opus or To Sir with Love, Dylan connects with his students in spite of himself and is able to offer hope to others amid his own disappointment and grief. As Dylan waits for some change in Maggie's condition, he reflects on his life and hers in numerous seamless flashbacks. Martin integrates faith elements into the story with a deft touch. But what makes this book sing is not the plot, which sometimes feels disaster-heavy (rape, abortion, coma, car accident), but the delightfully quirky characters. From Amos, the black, bald deputy who is Dylan's best friend, to Bryce Kai MacGregor, a Vietnam veteran who lives north of town in a drive-in movie theater, drinks Old Milwaukee beer and plays the bagpipes mostly in the buff, they are ingeniously imaginative creations. (May) Forecast: This promising novel marks the debut of Thomas Nelson's new fiction imprint, WestBow Press, which will also feature titles by Ted Dekker, Angela Hunt, Frank Peretti and Robert Whitlow. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

Dylan Styles, who once dreamed of a college teaching career, loves the South Carolina farming life he shares with his beloved wife, Maggie. He could not be happier when she tells him that she is pregnant. Nothing prepares Dylan, though, for the tragic delivery, which leaves his infant son dead and Maggie in a coma. Ironically, he is offered the teaching job he had once desired so badly when all he wants now is for Maggie to wake up. One of his students, Amanda, who also works at the hospital where Maggie lies, helps the suicidal and broken Dylan regain his will to live and come to terms with a God who let his son die. What should have been a powerful first novel turns out to be competent but lacking in emotional depth. Nothing here will offend Christian Booksellers Association (CBA) readers, but most libraries should pass on it except for regional collections. Martin lives near Jacksonville, FL. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.