
Jennifer Kitchell
Author of Girl with Skirt of Stars
Works by Jennifer Kitchell
Zoe’s Pizza Palace 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Canonical name
- Kitchell, Jennifer
- Gender
- female
- Nationality
- USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
First Line: With low tongue and open mouth, the man began soft as a jazzman to pull off the seduction.
Lilli Chischilly became a lawyer in order to protect her people-- the Navajo-- even to testifying before Congress about Colorado River water usage. Happily married, she is disconcerted when her childhood friend, Jerome Bah, moves back to the reservation and makes contact with her, but she's thrown even further off balance when the president of the Navajo Nation insists she joins Senator Lee show more and his family on a rafting trip through the Grand Canyon.
The Mormon presidential candidate whom many believe will be the next President of the United States has a reason why he wants Lilli along on the trip. One of his campaign promises is to use new technology to wring every last bit of water and power from Mother Nature. He also wants a legal guarantee to be granted to California for the water rights to the Colorado River. (Which means that-- no matter what happens-- California would get its water regardless of anyone else who needs it.)
Thinking Lilli will be a captive audience, Lee intends to make sure she agrees to this legal guarantee. What neither of them know is that Lee has an enemy who's determined to kill him somewhere along the river down in the depths of the Grand Canyon. Furthermore, the enemy's chances of success are excellent since there are only eleven people traveling on the raft.
Kitchell has a very lyrical writing style that has unexpected touches of humor, as when someone claims another character is "so narrow minded he could applaud with his ears."
The raft trip through the Grand Canyon is extremely suspenseful, since the reader knows there's a killer waiting for them somewhere along the route. A secondary plot line that involves Lilli's childhood friend, Jerome Bah, adds tension between Lilli and Jerome as well as serving as a natural springboard for sharing many Navajo customs and stories.
We could learn much from the Navajo. Tony Hillerman knew this, and Jennifer Kitchell, in her beautifully told story, is following in his footsteps.
Life is brief, she thought, tenuous, but it has a point. We are here to create life, and to teach it, and to die old in beauty. "Beauty" did not mean you walked to old age with no illness, or you walked to old age with cosmetically enhanced qualities of the young. It was not about physical attributes. It was about a quality of character.
May all of you walk in beauty. show less
Lilli Chischilly became a lawyer in order to protect her people-- the Navajo-- even to testifying before Congress about Colorado River water usage. Happily married, she is disconcerted when her childhood friend, Jerome Bah, moves back to the reservation and makes contact with her, but she's thrown even further off balance when the president of the Navajo Nation insists she joins Senator Lee show more and his family on a rafting trip through the Grand Canyon.
The Mormon presidential candidate whom many believe will be the next President of the United States has a reason why he wants Lilli along on the trip. One of his campaign promises is to use new technology to wring every last bit of water and power from Mother Nature. He also wants a legal guarantee to be granted to California for the water rights to the Colorado River. (Which means that-- no matter what happens-- California would get its water regardless of anyone else who needs it.)
Thinking Lilli will be a captive audience, Lee intends to make sure she agrees to this legal guarantee. What neither of them know is that Lee has an enemy who's determined to kill him somewhere along the river down in the depths of the Grand Canyon. Furthermore, the enemy's chances of success are excellent since there are only eleven people traveling on the raft.
Kitchell has a very lyrical writing style that has unexpected touches of humor, as when someone claims another character is "so narrow minded he could applaud with his ears."
The raft trip through the Grand Canyon is extremely suspenseful, since the reader knows there's a killer waiting for them somewhere along the route. A secondary plot line that involves Lilli's childhood friend, Jerome Bah, adds tension between Lilli and Jerome as well as serving as a natural springboard for sharing many Navajo customs and stories.
We could learn much from the Navajo. Tony Hillerman knew this, and Jennifer Kitchell, in her beautifully told story, is following in his footsteps.
Life is brief, she thought, tenuous, but it has a point. We are here to create life, and to teach it, and to die old in beauty. "Beauty" did not mean you walked to old age with no illness, or you walked to old age with cosmetically enhanced qualities of the young. It was not about physical attributes. It was about a quality of character.
May all of you walk in beauty. show less
I loved this book. Lilli Chischilly is fascinating, a well educated lawyer with a strong belief in her Navajo traditions. Rarely does a novel get me reading up on things the author touches, but I found myslef googling the Navajo religious traditions trying to get a better understanding. I reread the book after a couple of weeks of digesting all the overlapping story lines. Lilli's decidedly odd marriage, her relationship with her childhood friend Jerome Bah, and the mystery of what he show more photographed, then there's the presidental candidate and his strange family relationships. I thoroughly enjoyed the story, would love to hear more about Jerome and Lilli in future stories. show less
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.Lilli Chischilly is a Navajo lawyer who has found a pair of mutilated coyote carcasses carefully laid out on the hood of her vehicle. This is clearly a message, but the meaning of the message is a mystery. In the meantime, Jerome, Lilli's childhood soul mate, has returned to the Navajo Nation and alludes to a dark and burdensome secret that he wants Lilli to discover. Lilli has this on her mind when her boss asks her to escort presidential candidate Lee, his family and handlers on a river show more raft trip down the Grand Canyon. Lillie rightly guesses that this is a publicity stunt and has everything to do with the politics of water and land use that is ever present in the Western United States. If all of this isn't enough, a sniper with a grudge over a century old massacre is stalking the presidential candidate and his family with massacre plans of his own.
The plot of Girl with Skirt of Stars is fast paced and kept me reading into the wee hours of the morning. I did find the narrative a bit choppy and the characters lacking in depth, though, and this kept me from attaching to and caring very deeply about them. This type of book seems to call for better character development than Kitchell provided. There were also elements of the story that seemed quite important yet were never developed and just got dropped at the end. This is Kitchell's debut novel, so I'm hoping that these shortfalls are something that will improve in future.
As a native of the Southwest, I thought the descriptions of the Four Corners area were beautiful and I was drawn into the setting. The inclusion of quite a few Navajo words (there is a glossary at the end of the book) and how those words "mean" within the Navajo culture was a fantastic look into a little known people group. Language nuance is an important part of Kitchell's story.
Overall, I was pleased with Girl with Skirt of Stars and would recommend it to those interested in a fast paced novel set in the Southwest.
I would like to thank the publisher, Pronghorn Press, for providing me with a review copy of Girl with Skirt of Stars. show less
The plot of Girl with Skirt of Stars is fast paced and kept me reading into the wee hours of the morning. I did find the narrative a bit choppy and the characters lacking in depth, though, and this kept me from attaching to and caring very deeply about them. This type of book seems to call for better character development than Kitchell provided. There were also elements of the story that seemed quite important yet were never developed and just got dropped at the end. This is Kitchell's debut novel, so I'm hoping that these shortfalls are something that will improve in future.
As a native of the Southwest, I thought the descriptions of the Four Corners area were beautiful and I was drawn into the setting. The inclusion of quite a few Navajo words (there is a glossary at the end of the book) and how those words "mean" within the Navajo culture was a fantastic look into a little known people group. Language nuance is an important part of Kitchell's story.
Overall, I was pleased with Girl with Skirt of Stars and would recommend it to those interested in a fast paced novel set in the Southwest.
I would like to thank the publisher, Pronghorn Press, for providing me with a review copy of Girl with Skirt of Stars. show less
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.Right off the bat this book contained features that I really like and which usually indicate to me that I will like the book, such as the drawings at the start of each chapter and the Appendix of Navajo Terms and Concepts. I like to feel that I am learning a bit even when I'm reading for pleasure. The only thing missing for me were a few maps of the area. I love books with maps whether they are of real or imagined places. It sets a tone and orients me to the story and what the storyteller is show more seeing as she writes about the characters within the setting.
Kitchell's writing is lovely and kept me turning the pages. She gracefully explores the themes of reality v. perceptions; and of words and of images - their meanings, what they say (and what they hide) and how they can be influenced by culture, language, time, place, and who gets to "write" the history. I really enjoyed the story, but I wanted more. I wanted to know more about Lilli, Jerome and the conspicuously missing husband, Jake.
I loved the raft trip down the Colorado. Her descriptions of the river, the light and dark, the stars, land, cliffs, birds and wildlife left me longing to be there. However, I again wished for a little more character development of the travelers. Kitchell definitely gave us a feel for the characters but in very broad strokes. At the same time, I thought the whole assassin's story was extraneous. Its only purpose seemed to be to tell the story of the Mountain Meadows Massacre and John D. Lee of Lees Ferry fame. I think that story added a lot to her themes but could have been told just as well by Lilli herself.
Despite these little quibbles, I really loved the book and would recommend it. I am hoping that my questions and desire to know these characters better will be answered in the next Lilli book. show less
Kitchell's writing is lovely and kept me turning the pages. She gracefully explores the themes of reality v. perceptions; and of words and of images - their meanings, what they say (and what they hide) and how they can be influenced by culture, language, time, place, and who gets to "write" the history. I really enjoyed the story, but I wanted more. I wanted to know more about Lilli, Jerome and the conspicuously missing husband, Jake.
I loved the raft trip down the Colorado. Her descriptions of the river, the light and dark, the stars, land, cliffs, birds and wildlife left me longing to be there. However, I again wished for a little more character development of the travelers. Kitchell definitely gave us a feel for the characters but in very broad strokes. At the same time, I thought the whole assassin's story was extraneous. Its only purpose seemed to be to tell the story of the Mountain Meadows Massacre and John D. Lee of Lees Ferry fame. I think that story added a lot to her themes but could have been told just as well by Lilli herself.
Despite these little quibbles, I really loved the book and would recommend it. I am hoping that my questions and desire to know these characters better will be answered in the next Lilli book. show less
This review was written for LibraryThing Early Reviewers.Statistics
- Works
- 6
- Members
- 45
- Popularity
- #340,916
- Rating
- 3.5
- Reviews
- 15
- ISBNs
- 2

