Sordid, pathetic, senselessly exciting. . . has the immediacy and the
significance of a nerve-shattering explosion.--The New Republic
The depression of the 1930s led people to desperate measures to survive.
The marathon dance craze, which flourished at that time, seemed a simple
way for people to earn extra money dancing the hours away for cash, for
weeks at a time. But the underside of that craze was filled with a
competition and violence unknown to most ballrooms.
Horace McCoy was born near Nashville, Tennessee in 1897. His novels
include I Should Have Stayed Home (1938), and Kiss Tomorrow Goodbye
(1948).