Buchan of the Month: Introducing The Dancing Floor by John Buchan

buchan of the month 2019 poster

The Dancing Floor is the sixth book in my John Buchan reading project, Buchan of the Month 2019.   You can find out more about the project and the books I read in 2018 here, and view my reading list for 2019 here.

20190607_101841What follows is a (spoiler-free) introduction to The Dancing Floor.  It is also an excuse to show off my paperback copy of the book published by Hodder in 1961 with its cover that, to my mind, more resembles a poster for a B-movie than a John Buchan novel!    I will be publishing my review of the book later in the month.


The Dancing Floor was published in the UK by Hodder & Stoughton in July 1926.  In the United States it appeared first in serial form, under the title ‘The Goddess from the Shades’, in Street & Smith’s Popular Magazine between May and June 1926.  It was published in novel form in the US by Houghton Mifflin on 24th September 1926.

John Buchan first explored the idea for the novel in a supernatural short story called ‘Basilissa’ published in Blackwood’s Magazine in April 1914 and included in the US (but not the UK) edition of the short story collection, The Watcher by the Threshold.   As Ursula Buchan explains in her recent biography of her grandfather, Beyond the Thirty-Nine Steps, the story was inspired by a cruise John Buchan and his wife, Susan, made in the company of friend Gerard Craig Sellar in 1910.  ‘They […] sailed down the coast of Euboea to Athens, passing the Petali islands on the way, where they were intrigued by a shuttered and impenetrable house, standing back from the shore in a walled garden.’ Ten years later Buchan expanded his short story to novel length, adding the character Sir Edward Leithen who had first appeared in The Power-House.

Like his other adventure stories (or as Buchan termed them, his ‘shockers’) The Dancing Floor enjoyed considerable commercial success.  Janet Adam Smith reports that in the UK it sold 31,000 copies in its first year after publication making it his best performing book after The Thirty-Nine Steps and Greenmantle.  It had first year sales in the US of 10,000 copies.  Combined sales by 1960 for the Hodder & Stoughton edition and later Nelson edition were 122,000 copies.

Sources:

Ursula Buchan, Beyond the Thirty-Nine Steps: A Life of John Buchan (Bloomsbury, 2019)
Janet Adam Smith, John Buchan: A Biography (OUP, 1985 [1965])
Kenneth Hillier and Michael Ross, The First Editions of John Buchan: A Collector’s Illustrated Biography (Avonworld, 2008)

buchan of the month 2019

20 Books of Summer Reading Challenge 2019

20 Books of Summer 2019

This annual challenge is run by my namesake Cathy at 746 Books.  This year it takes place between 3rd June and 3rd September.  I participated for the first time last year but didn’t manage to organise/discipline my reading enough to complete my list. I’m determined to do better this year.

As Cathy explains, the rules are simple.  Take the Books of Summer image, pick your own 10, 15 or 20 books you’d like to read and link back Cathy’s master post at 746 Books on 3 June 2019 so she knows that you are taking part.  The rules are accommodating as well.  Want to swap a book? Go for it.  Fancy changing your list half way through? No problem.  Deciding to drop your goal from 20 to 15? She’s fine with that.

In putting together my list, I decided to concentrate on four categories:

  • Blog tour commitments I have from June onwards
  • Review copies sent to me by lovely publishers or won in giveaways run by Readers First
  • Books from my TBR pile
  • Unread books received in my monthly Reading In Heels subscription box

You can find my list below with links to the book description on Goodreads. I’ll update the list with links to my reviews when (note, not if) I’ve read them.

  1. The Playground Murders by Lesley Thomson Read and reviewed 
  2. The Serpent’s Mark by S.W. Perry Read and reviewed
  3. Birdie & Jude by Phyllis H. Moore Read and reviewed
  4. A Modern Family by Helga Flatland Read and reviewed
  5. Motive X by Stefan Ahnhem Read and reviewed
  6. The Mathematical Bridge by Jim Kelly
  7. Fled by Meg Keneally  Read and reviewed
  8. Improvement by Joan Silber
  9. The Dinner List by Rebecca Serle Read and reviewed
  10. The Narrow Land by Christine Dwyer Hickey
  11. Transcription by Kate Atkinson
  12. Blood Orange by Harriet Tyce
  13. In My Life by Alan Johnson Read and reviewed
  14. The Music Shop by Rachel Joyce
  15. Munich by Robert Harris
  16. Ponti by Sharlene Teo
  17. Liar by Ayelet Gundar-Goshen
  18. House of Beauty by Melba Escobar
  19. The Outrun by Amy Liptrot
  20. Social Creature by Tara Isabella Burton