Skeleton Man, Tony Hillerman
(Harper Collins, 2004) ***
As always, Tony Hillerman spins a yarn that will appeal to all of you who enjoy a
mystery and a southwest setting. For those who are long-time fans of Hillermans two
Navajo tribal policemen, Sergeant Jim Chee and Lieutenant Joe Leaphorn, you wont be
disappointed.
As he often does, Hillerman ties this mystery to a real event, the deadly collision
of two passenger planes over the Grand Canyon back in 1956, which killed all 128
passengers. In this novel, one of the passengers is carrying a valuable cache of diamonds.
Nearly fifty years later, the theft of a valuable diamond from a local pawn shop is
apparently tied to a much earlier diamond robbery in the same area, and both may be
connected to the diamonds that were never recovered. Although Lieutenant Leaphorn is
retired, he becomes involved in the mystery, along with his protégé Jim Chee and
Chees romantic interest, border patrol officer Bernie Manuelito(look for significant
developments here).
Adding to the suspense, a potential heiress to this fortune shows
up, hoping to recover her fathers remains from the ancient wreckage, unaware of
competition from a few villainous types who are hoping to do her out of her inheritance
and recover the diamonds. The search is complicated by the fact that the debris is in a
remote area of the canyon considered sacred by the Hopi Indians. The danger and excitement
increase as the involved parties descend into the canyon, now flooded by local
thunderstorms, and not everyone survives the confrontation that awaits them.