Bad Axe County, Wisconsin, may seem quiet and serene, but there is hatred bubbling just under the surface. Sheriff Heidi Kick first notices it when her own brother-in-law, Kenny, is seen driving around with Confederate flags on his pickup. Then a couple migrant workers from a nearby farm show up bloodied and bruised, one talking about a fight club. Meanwhile, Augustus Faff has just published a book on the round barns in the area, built by Alga Shivers, and in the process uncovered genealogical lines he knows some residents would like to keep hidden. When the leader of a national white supremacist group comes to Farmstead, events come to a head, putting the sheriff and her family (not to mention the non-white residents of the town) in danger.
While Heidi is trying to keep her community safe and stop the Sons of Tyre before they put more lives at risk, her family life is starting to come apart at the seams. Her oldest child, Opie, has expressed a desire to be a boy rather than a girl. Her husband, Harvey, is meeting up regularly with some woman at the dam. And Heidi just can't say no when a call comes in on her days off.
This gritty follow-up to Bad Axe County was difficult to listen to at times, because it hits so close to the reckoning our country is going through. Though we like to think our communities are wholesome and kind, sometimes that's not the case. John Galligan shows, too, how easy it can be to get swept up in a movement, how someone can get in too deep before they realize it (which is not to excuse the evil hate groups and their members can do, of course). He also shows just how entrenched bigotry can be in our communities, and how hard it can be to shine a light on it.
Sometimes fiction can have an impact on readers in a way other mediums lack, and that might be the case here. While Dead Man Dancing doesn't show us anything we haven't heard about on the news, it puts faces to the deeds, emotions to the victims, and shows how real and insidious the problems actually are.