Skeleton Man
4/5
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About this ebook
A chilling middle grade novel featuring a brave young girl, missing parents, and a terrifying stranger, based on a Native American legend. R.L. Stine, New York Times bestselling author of the Goosebumps series, raved, "This book gave ME nightmares!”
Molly’s father, who grew up on the Mohawk Reserve of Akwesasne, always had the best scary stories. One of her favorites was the legend of Skeleton Man, a gruesome tale about a man with such insatiable hunger he ate his own flesh before devouring those around him.
But ever since her parents mysteriously vanished, those spooky tales have started to feel all too real.
Don't miss The Legend of Skeleton Man: a spine-tingling collection of Skeleton Man and its sequel, The Return of Skeleton Man!
Joseph Bruchac
Joseph Bruchac is the author of Skeleton Man, The Return of Skeleton Man, Bearwalker, The Dark Pond, and Whisper in the Dark, as well as numerous other critically acclaimed novels, poems, and stories, many drawing on his Abenaki heritage. Mr. Bruchac and his wife, Carol, live in upstate New York, in the same house where he was raised by his grandparents. You can visit him online at www.josephbruchac.com.
Read more from Joseph Bruchac
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Reviews for Skeleton Man
17 ratings11 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Skeleton Man by Tony Hillerman and performed by George Guidall is the penultimate book in the Navajo Mysteries series. Retired Lt. Joe Leaphorn is put on the scent of a missing cache of diamonds after a diamond is stolen from the local trading post. A Hopi man is accused of the theft when he tries to pawn a similar diamond for $20.While the Hopi sits in jail, stories surface about a lost briefcase of diamonds, as well as a denied inheritance. Those who want the diamonds, as well the woman who wants her rightful piece of her father's estate both go in search for these diamonds. They relate to a 1956 plane crash over the Grand Canyon. A diamond courier was on board. When his body was recovered, it was missing an arm and the attached briefcase. That case was reported spotted later in the Colorado river, tied up on some debris. But it was gone by the time the authorities were there to recover it.Chee, researching the Hopi's claims that he was given the diamond, crosses paths with Leaphorn's investigation into the Trading Post robbery. Both cases rely on stories passed down through the generations, there is a lot of repetition of the events of the crash, as well as the report of the old man with the diamonds. For readers who don't like this level of repetition, I suggest either skimming these sections or skipping the book all together. Personally, I think the repetition worked well here, both thematically and for dispersing clues.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Although I can't fault the plotting, I feel that I now read Tony Hillerman's books more to keep up on what's happening with Jim Chee, Joe Leaphorn and Bernie Manuelito. Still, well worth the time spent.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Typical Hillerman, with Joe Leaphorn in a supporting role as the legendary retired lieutenant and Jim Chee still on the force. The story centers on the results of a mid-air collision of two aircraft in the 1950s, lost diamonds, and the rapacity of greedy Easterners, and features Jim and Bernie and Cowboy Dashee.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Slumped in the middle via repetition, but always interesting characters solving am interesting mystery.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Tony Hillerman returns to the bookshelf with this tale based on a 1956 plane crash in the Grand Canyon. While Jim Chee is suffering a little anxiety over his forthcoming marriage to Bernie Manuelito, Joe Leaphorn is called in for a consultation. Leaphorn digs up old memories and, with Chee, an old case. As always, Hillerman’s characters are as welcome as old friends.Published in hardcover by Harper Collins.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5In a bit of a departure, this story is framed. It also takes place in a relatively short period of time. Leaphorn plays a very minor part in this story (sadly). I liked seeing Chee & Bernie - what they were both thinking about in terms of their coming marriage - what they were worried about and what they were hoping for. The mystery included a bit of interesting history (a horrific crash over the Grand Canyon in the 50's).
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Decent enough story, but the true appeal of the Chee/Leaphorn mysteries are their details about Navajo and Hopi life, culture, and myths, and this one has very little of any of that. I'd recommend any of the other books in this series, but you can stay away from this one. I have a feeling this (17th) is the last of Hillerman's Chee/Leaphorn stories, and even if it isn't, it's probably the last one I read. The story is a little too convoluted, and its solution pretty predicable. Too bad, I've always enjoyed these characters.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Outsiders are a big part of this mystery. Their actions result in problems that Leaphorn and Chee must deal with. When a friend of cowboy Dashee gets arrested for stealing a diamond that he claims was given to him by an old Indian, Dashee asks Jim to help him prove his friend is innocent. This chain of events gets Leaphorn remembering a diamond an old trader claimed to own. Are they real diamonds? Where did they really come from? Were they lost during a major disaster involving two passenger planes? And why are so many Easterners suddenly interested in the diamonds? Leaphorn does most of the thinking while Jim, Dashee and Bernie are involved in most of the action.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Navajo County Deputy Sheriff Cowboy Dashee’s cousin is accused of stealing and pawning a large diamond. Sargent Jim Chee, Lieutenant Joe Leaphorn (ret.) and Chee’s fiancée Bernie Manuelito work together on this case, and prove that the diamond is connected to a plane crash that took place in the Grand Canyon area fifty years ago. A diamond dealer was among the 172 passengers who died in that plane crash, and he had a case of diamonds handcuffed to his wrist at the time. His body was never found but someone had seen a severed arm with the case attached to it, which had been washed away by the canyon water before it could be obtained. The diamond dealer was planning to marry a woman who was carrying his child and their engagement ring was among the missing diamonds. Unfortunately his father did not approve of the fiancé and refused to give her, or the child, any of the estate. After the man’s father died the woman kept trying to obtain a fair share of the estate for her daughter, but the family’s attorneys prevented it and controlled the large estate. Now the daughter is grown and when she heard of the severed arm being spotted she realized that DNA from it could prove that she was the diamond dealer’s daughter and she could receive a portion of the estate of her father. However, the unscrupulous attorneys who controlled the estate, where willing to do whatever was necessary to prevent her from finding that arm. Leaphorn was the narrator of this story and he did not play a large role in it. However, he visited his old friend, McGinnis, at the trading post which had been a hub of activity for many years, but now was abandoned, except for its owner, McGinnis. Leaphorn lamented about the loss of old friends and how things had changed. This novel seems be bringing the Leaphorn and Chee adventures to an end. Pat and I wonder whether it may be the last in the series.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5An okay way to pass some time, but nothing to highly recommend. A little tighter than some other of his recent mysteries, but nothing like the first Leaphorn/Chee mysteries. As others have said, the native American culture is no longer central to his plots, only background color. I wish he had stayed more with Leaphorn's handling of his retirement which seemed central at the beginning, but simply disappeared as the book wore on.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Although not great literature, Tony Hillerman delivers a tight story around characters one has come to consider family over the course of his writing.
Book preview
Skeleton Man - Joseph Bruchac
1
Footsteps on the Stair
I’M NOT SURE how TO begin this story. For one thing, it’s still going on. For another, you should never tell a story unless you’re sure how it’s going to end. At least that’s what my sixth-grade teacher, Ms. Shabbas, says. And I’m not sure at all. I’m not sure that I even know the beginning. I’m not sure if I’m a minor character or the heroine. Heck, I’m not even sure I’ll be around to tell the end of it. But I don’t think anyone else is going to tell this story.
Wait! What was that noise?
I listen for the footsteps on the stairs, footsteps much heavier than those an elderly man should make. But it’s quiet, just the usual spooky nighttime creaking of this old house. I don’t hear anyone coming now. If I don’t survive, maybe they’ll all realize I should have been taken seriously and then warn the world!
Warn the world. That’s pretty melodramatic, isn’t it? But that is one of the things I do well, melodrama. At least that is what Ms. Shabbas says. Her name is Maureen Shabbas. But Ms. Showbiz is what we all call her, because her main motive for living seems to be torturing our class with old Broadway show tunes. She starts every day by singing a few bars of one and then making it the theme for the day. It is so disgustingly awful that we all sort of like it. Imagine someone who loves to imitate Yul Brynner in The King and I, a woman with an Afro, no less, getting up and singing Shall We Dance?
in front of a classroom of appalled adolescents. Ms. Showbiz. And she has the nerve to call me melodramatic!
But I guess I am. Maybe this whole thing is a product of my overactive imagination. If that turns out to be so, all I can say is who wouldn’t have an overactive imagination if they’d heard the kind of stories I used to hear from Mom and Dad?
Dad had the best stories. They were ones his aunties told him when he was growing up on the Mohawk Reserve of Akwesasne on the Canadian side. One of my favorites was the one about the skeleton monster. He was just a human being at first, a lazy, greedy uncle who hung around the longhouse and let everyone else hunt for him. One day, alone in the lodge, waiting for the others to come home with food, Lazy Uncle burned his finger really badly in the fire and stuck it into his mouth to cool it. Oooh,
he said as he sucked the cooked flesh, this tastes good!
(Isn’t that gross? I love it. At least, I used to love it.)
It tasted so good, in fact, that he ate all the flesh off his finger. Ah,
he said, this is an easy way to get food, but I am still hungry.
So he cooked another finger, and another, until he had eaten all his fingers. Oooh,
he said, that was good, but I am still hungry.
So he cooked his toes and ate them. He cooked his feet and ate them. He cooked his legs and ate them. He cooked his right arm and then his left. He kept on until he had cooked his whole body and eaten it, and all that was left was a skeleton. When he moved, his bones rubbed together: tschick-a-tschick-tschick-a-tschick.
Ah,
he said in a voice that was now just a dry whisper. That was good, but I am still hungry. I hope that my relatives come home soon.
And when his relatives came home, one by one, they found that the lodge was dark except for the glow of the cooking fire. They could see a shadowy shape beckoning to them from the other side of the fire. They could hear a sound like this: tschick-a-tschick-tschick-a-tschick.
Come in, my relatives,
Skeleton Man whispered. I have been waiting for you.
One by one all of his relatives came into the lodge. Skeleton Man caught them and ate them, all but one. She was his niece, and she had been playing in her favorite spot down by the river that flowed through the gorge. She was late coming home because she had seen a rabbit that had fallen into the river. She had rescued it from drowning and warmed it in her arms until it was able to run away.
When the little girl came to the lodge, she was surprised at how quiet it was. She should have heard people talking and laughing, but she didn’t hear anything. Something was wrong. Slowly, carefully, she approached the door of the lodge. A strange sound came from the shadows within: tschick-a-tschick-tschick-a-tschick. Then a dry voice called out to her.
My niece,
Skeleton Man whispered. Come into the lodge. I have been waiting for you.
That voice made her skin crawl. Where are my parents?
she asked.
They are here. They are here inside,
Skeleton Man whispered. Come in and be with them.
No,
the girl said, I will not come inside.
Ah,
Skeleton Man replied in his dry, thin voice, that is all right. I will come out for you.
Then Lazy Uncle, the Skeleton Man, walked out of the lodge. His dry bones rubbed together as he walked toward the little girl: tschick-a-tschick-tschick-a-tschick.
The girl began to run, not sure where to go. Skeleton Man would have caught her and eaten her if it hadn’t been for that rabbit she’d rescued from the river. It appeared on the path before her.
I will help you because you saved me,
said the rabbit. Follow me.
Then the rabbit helped the little girl outwit Skeleton Man. It even showed her how to bring everyone Skeleton Man had eaten back to life.
My mom and dad told me stories like that all the time. Before they vanished. Disappeared. Gone, just like that.
I was on TV when they disappeared. You probably saw me on Unsolved Mysteries. The news reporter said into her microphone, Child left alone in house for over three days, terrified, existing on cornflakes and canned food.
Actually I went to school on Tuesday and called out for pizza once. Mom had left money on her dresser when they went out that Saturday evening and never returned.
I didn’t know