The Skeleton Key

This reunion will tear a family apart ...

Summer, 2021. Nell has come home at her family's insistence to celebrate an anniversary. Fifty years ago, her father wrote The Golden Bones. Part picture book, part treasure hunt, Sir Frank Churcher created a fairy story about Elinore, a murdered woman whose skeleton was scattered all over England. Clues and puzzles in the pages of The Golden Bones led readers to seven sites where jewels were buried - gold and precious stones, each a different part of a skeleton. One by one, the tiny golden bones were dug up until only Elinore's pelvis remained hidden.

The book was a sensation. A community of treasure hunters called the Bonehunters formed, in frenzied competition, obsessed to a dangerous degree. People sold their homes to travel to England and search for Elinore. Marriages broke down as the quest consumed people. A man died. The book made Frank a rich man. Stalked by fans who could not tell fantasy from reality, his daughter, Nell, became a recluse.

But now the Churchers must be reunited. The book is being reissued along with a new treasure hunt and a documentary crew are charting everything that follows. Nell is appalled, and terrified. During the filming, Frank finally reveals the whereabouts of the missing golden bone. And then all hell breaks loose.

From the bestselling author of He Said/She Said and Watch Her Fall, this is a taut, mesmerizing novel about a daughter haunted by her father's legacy . . .

BUY THE BOOK

512 pages

Average rating: 8.4

5 RATINGS

|

Community Reviews

emily_roamswild
Feb 26, 2023
7/10 stars
This is a great ride. Inspired by a book that led folks to small, real treasures, this novel takes us on a similar journey. The horrors of men are a central theme of this book: their pride, evil and ugliness—how it effects everyone around them and tarnishes even the best men as they scramble to pick up the pieces. It was a bit… soap opera? Lots of drama and the treasure and intrigue of the first chapters is lost once the mystery starts to unravel, not to reveal a sinister plot of deranged bone seekers but something far darker—the sinister evils of just plain men. Still a stunning read. I just liked the beginning more than I enjoyed the end, because of the family drama. However, don’t skip it. If you love literature, mystery and found family, this is for you.

See why thousands of readers are using Bookclubs to stay connected.