Dance Prone
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''Dance Prone'' is the second novel by
New Zealand New Zealand ( mi, Aotearoa ) is an island country in the southwestern Pacific Ocean. It consists of two main landmasses—the North Island () and the South Island ()—and over 700 smaller islands. It is the sixth-largest island count ...
author
David Coventry David Henry Halford Coventry (born 2 October 1969, Wellington) is a New Zealand born author and musician. Published in six different languages, his debut novel, '' The Invisible Mile'' (2015), was the winner of the 2016 Hubert Church Award for ...
. Released in July 2020, the novel examines the
post-hardcore Post-hardcore is a punk rock music genre that maintains the aggression and intensity of hardcore punk but emphasizes a greater degree of creative expression. It was initially inspired by post-punk and noise rock. Like post-punk, the term has been ...
scene in the US during the mid-1980s and the traumatic effects of sexual abuse met upon several of the novels characters over the following decades. 'Filtered through a screen of trauma and amnesia' the novel is 'part whodunnit, and part philosophical voyage.'


Style and themes

Coventry has stated in interviews the novel is an attempt to further explore his investigations into memory initially explored in his debut, ''
The Invisible Mile ''The Invisible Mile'' is the 2015 debut novel by New Zealand writer, David Coventry. The novel is a re-imagining of the 1928 Tour de France narrated in first-person by a fictional rider. The novel was a bestseller in New Zealand and the winner ...
''. 'Across its 400–odd pages, ''Dance Prone'' disrupts linear time and jumps between 1985 and the early 21st century, with chapters ranging from 2002 to 2020. In other words, we see the main characters in their 20s and then ageing into their 40s and 50s. Ageing and memory are key preoccupations of this novel.' In his review of the novel, John Duke states the question of violence, memory and its unreliability run throughout the book as Coventry uses music to address bigger concerns dealing with trauma, stating with in the narrative 'the act of remembering can turn into a form of trauma in itself.' With music at times acting as a stand in for the machinations of memory, memory is portrayed as at once destructive and creative. The novel uses elliptical language games to confront wider philosophical issues outside of the narrative itself. With each song in the book standing in for an act of memory, the performance of the music ritualizes the destruction of old memories and consecrates the new. The deconstructive trust of this portrayal enables memory to have a physical trace in both the bodies of the performers and the audience. This is explicit on the language forms the author uses to eke out the narrative. According to Annaleese Jochems: 'Much of the novel is written in pushing, intestinal sentences. Each word feels carefully chosen; the density and drive of the novel’s language give a great sense of force and urgency.... Coventry engages the blind, helpless evil behind the perpetrator’s actions with thought and empathy, at no cost to our sense of the inestimable hurt suffered by the victims.'


Reception

The novel has been well received, with mainly favourable reviews. In the New Zealand Herald, David Herkt stated that the novel is 'profound… Pitch-perfect and nuanced. As ''Dance Prone'' proves, Coventry’s work is some of the finest in recent New Zealand literature. His explorations of music and art are remarkable. His characters live and resound. The American Midwest, the city square of Jemaa el-Fna in Marrakech, and the coast near Red Rocks in Wellington are all landscapes evoked with clarity…. Extraordinary and remarkable.' For the Readingroom Annaleese Jochems remarked "The blood, desire, pain and loss – as well as Conrad’s eventual contentment – all of it feels true, because of the novel’s volatile physicality, and the unshrinking vulnerability of its narrator. More than anything I’ve read in ages, ''Dance Prone'' feels real." In her review Josie Shapiro stated that "''Dance Prone'' is a novel that interrogates music and capacity for producing societal change, the bonds of friendship and family, and the manner in which we avoid confronting ourselves with the truth. …. I had a sense that if I could unlock one sentence, then I might discover the meaning of the whole novel, or perhaps the meaning of life. … Coventry is committed to writing fiction that’s gritty and raw and true."{{Cite web, last=Shapiro, first=Josie, date=2020-07-14, title=Book Review: Dance Prone by David Coventry, url=https://readclose.com/2020/07/15/book-review-dance-prone-by-david-coventry/, archive-url=, archive-date=, access-date=2020-10-31, website=Read Close, language=en


References

2020 novels 21st-century New Zealand novels Post-hardcore Picador (imprint) books