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Skeleton Man (Joe Leaphorn and Jim Chee Series #17) »

Book cover image of Skeleton Man (Joe Leaphorn and Jim Chee Series #17) by Tony Hillerman

Authors: Tony Hillerman
ISBN-13: 9780061967795, ISBN-10: 0061967793
Format: Mass Market Paperback
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
Date Published: May 2010
Edition: (Non-applicable)

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Author Biography: Tony Hillerman

Tony Hillerman's experience as a journalist and a lover of Native American culture lent an unmistakable authenticity to his mysteries. In addition to his popular series starring Navajo Tribal Police detectives Chee and Leaphorn, he wrote standalone novels, essays about the Southwest, and a warmly reviewed autobiography (Seldom Disappointed) that revealed not only his talent, but his bravery as a soldier in World War II. He died in 2008 at the age of 83.

Book Synopsis

Since his retirement from the Navajo Tribal Police, former lieutenant Joe Leaphorn is running out of stories to tell at the weekly coffee klatches with his buddies. That is until he gets sucked into helping investigate what at first seems to be a simple trading post robbery. The simple-minded kid nailed for the crime is related to a former colleague of Joe's, and he needs help. Sergeant Jim Chee and his fiancé Bernie are also on the case, which turns into a search for the remains of a passenger on one of the planes that went down into the Grand Canyon 50 years ago. That passenger happened to have handcuffed to his wrist an attaché case filled with a fortune in diamonds - one of which turned up in the robbery. Lots of bad guys are looking for the gems, and it's a race to the finish during a monsoon in the canyon to see who will survive and who will be brought to justice.

The Washington Post - Corrigan Corrigan

Leaphorn says at the outset of Skeleton Man that the story "illustrates his Navajo belief in universal connections. . . . The entire cosmos being an infinitely complicated machine all working together." With spare elegance, Hillerman makes good on Leaphorn's promise, even conjuring up a nuptial finale worthy of that non-Native-American master of happy coincidences, Charles Dickens.

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