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Grandmother Spider  Mm
 
 

Grandmother Spider Mm (Mass Market Paperback)

by James Doss (Author) "TO THE EAST, an iridescent rainbow arches shimmeringly over misted mountains ..." (more)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (10 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 10.99
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Product Description

From Amazon.com

It's pretty well understood that mysteries come with an implied contract. Authors, for their part, promise to deliver plots and resolutions, however improbable, with some degree of plausibility. Readers, in turn, give an author a 50-50 shot by turning down the gain on their innate disbelief. Then along comes Grandmother Spider and all bets are off.

Southern Ute tribal policeman Charlie Moon has a problem. It seems that, thanks to the imprudent squishing of a wayward spider, the giant spirit Grandmother Spider has risen from her cave below Navajo Lake and exacted revenge on humanity by snatching the research scientist William Pizinski and Tommy Tonompicket, the local carouser with whom he was drinking. Charlie knows this because the squisher was Sarah Frank, the 9-year-old ward of his elderly, shamanic, and altogether elsewhere aunt, Daisy Perika. And Daisy got it straight from a dwarfish spirit called a pitukupf.

The pitukupf half smiled, exposing jagged rows of yellowed teeth. He vigorously stirred the crooked stick in the embers under the apparition, kindling new flames. The dwarf ceremoniously lifted the helical baton like a conductor calling dark chords from an unseen orchestra. The glowing sparks swirled up the column of heated air... and the hideous image of the eight-legged creature followed. As it ascended, the grayish form took on the bright orange hue of the yellow flames beneath it. The apparition grew larger, the entrapped man struggled vainly in hope of release. And screamed piteously for someone to help him.
And that's not the half of it. Before long, Charlie and his friend, Granite Creek Police Chief Scott Parris, are up to their gun belts in national security issues, mutilated bodies, hideous creatures roaming the countryside snatching sandwiches from the mouths of 80-year-olds, and the bizarre reappearance of the two missing and now-amnesiac tipplers. And, happily, that's still not the half of it.

Grandmother Spider is Charlie Moon's sixth, strangest, and perhaps funniest airing (from 1994's The Shaman Sings through 1999's The Night Visitor). With mystery and mysticism enough to satisfy Hillerman's fans, and humor, memorable characterization, and good writing enough to satisfy everyone else, who's going to quibble about a silly old contract? -- Michael Hudson --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.



From Publishers Weekly

Mysteries with Native American characters seem to come in two varieties: tough-minded and realistic (think Tony Hillerman's Leaphorn/Chee stories and Peter Bowen's books about Montana's Gabriel Du Pr ), or softer and sillierDlike Doss's Shaman series about Ute policeman Charlie Moon and his dotty old aunt, Daisy Perika. Number six in the series is even sillier than its predecessors, setting up a ludicrous situationDthree men savagely attacked by what seems to be a giant spider or an alien space vehicleDand then daring the reader to come up with some other, more rational explanation. Moon, a slow-moving giant who would rather eat or fish than do the heavy lifting involved in police work, doesn't add much energy or action to the story: he spends most of his time jousting verbally with his aunt Daisy about her visions and beliefs or romancing a totally unlikely Hollywood glamour girl dropped into the scene to extend a thin story. And while it's true that most readers won't guess what it was that actually attacked rocket scientist William Pizinski's pickup truck on the shore of Navajo Lake in Colorado, it's also true that not many of them will stick around until the dumb little secret is revealed. (Jan. 9)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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TO THE EAST, an iridescent rainbow arches shimmeringly over misted mountains. Read the first page
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Customer Reviews

10 Reviews
5 star:
 (8)
4 star:
 (1)
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Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (10 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars Great fun! perfect summer reading, May 27 2004
Finally...a mystery so outrageous it seems unsolvable without breaking the bounds of reason...and a solution outrageous enough to work!! I loved how this book mixed elements of a modern police/detective story with Native American shamanism and even a little of the supernatural. I also enjoyed the characters, especially the old shaman Daisy ,a cranky, fiesty woman with a shrewd sense of humor, and Charlie Moon, the soft-spoken Ute police chief with an appetite for unhealthy food.

After Daisy's young charge Sarah smashes a spider with her biology book, the Shaman tells her of how Grandmother Spider will rise from Navaho Lake to revenge her spider people. That very night something carries off two men...and then the strangely mutilated body of a third victim is found--the victim of a spider attack? Soon, Charlie Moon finds himself sorting through evidence so bizzare, even HE is starting to believe in Grandmother Spider...

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4.0 out of 5 stars Fun Story, Jun 20 2003
By S. Sykes (Dothan, AL United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This book was an easy read. I liked the mystery, but there was little build up of suspense. He's not as good as 'early Hillerman', but it falls in line with some of Hillermans more recent work. I think Kirk Mitchell probably does a little better job of building suspense. I do plan to read one of his other books.
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1.0 out of 5 stars Grandmother Spider, Aug 10 2002
This book was not entertaining. I suffered through each page. I hated the plot and most of the characters. I will never read another Doss book again.
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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Great entertainment!
A protaganist with a sense of humor, a series of incredible incidents that keep you searching for a reasonable explanation, and a happy ending. Read more
Published on Feb 3 2002

5.0 out of 5 stars Made me laugh!
This book isn't hilarious. It's just plain old good and funny. What a group of characters and a story that had me baffled until the very end and I'm really good at figuring... Read more
Published on Dec 11 2001 by sunnykissed

5.0 out of 5 stars Encounters of the forth type
I met James D Doss when his 2 first books were translated in french; then I was hooked. So now, I am eagerly waiting for his seventh tale. Read more
Published on Jun 20 2001 by prieur

5.0 out of 5 stars Awesome...
I am a new reader of Mr. Doss, and after reading Grandmother Spider, I will never pass up a book with his name on it. Read more
Published on May 27 2001 by mrs m balon

5.0 out of 5 stars Is Grandmother Spider really a spider?
In this hilarious send-up of Indian folklore and small-town police work, you never know until the end. Read more
Published on May 27 2001 by lvkleydorff

5.0 out of 5 stars Engaging characters, window to tribal politics
Something strange has happened but Acting Chief Charlie Moon doesn't believe Grandmother Spider really has climbed out from her caves under the lake to rip a man's head off and... Read more
Published on Feb 25 2001 by booksforabuck

5.0 out of 5 stars in the tradition of Tony Hillerman
On April first on Colorado's Southern Ute Reservation, Shaman Daisy Perika's young ward Sarah Frank steps on a spider, but fails to perform the proper ritual to ward off trouble... Read more
Published on Jan 9 2001 by Harriet Klausner

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