A teenager accused of homicide finds little support from his family or community. A woman in a conservative town must find ways to protect her gay brother from their militaristic mother. A graduate student discovers that his research has been stolen, probably by the same street gang he has been studying. A former police officer, fired for shooting a deranged man, patrols his own neighborhood. Set in places as diverse as Fort Sumner, Taos, Chimayó, Albuquerque, Santa Fe, and Clovis, the fourteen stories in The Tombstone Race explore the surprising connections and disjunctions between rich and poor, urban and rural, old and new, ugly and beautiful. Based in part on the author's experiences as a Spanish/English interpreter in the criminal courts of New Mexico, Skinner's stories navigate the state's changing cultures with humor and heart.
Skinner allows his characters to speak in a language that is evocative, unsentimental, and empirical.'--Pasatiempo
These are New Mexico stories, but they belong to all of those who suffer in the hidden world of deprivation and desperation that much of America would rather not see. There is beauty in Skinner's world, but it is not the easy beauty of green summer days along a blue river, but the honesty of looking a desperate person in the eye and finding humanity there.'--Colorado Review
New Mexico is fertile literary soil for José Skinner's second story collection, The Tombstone Race. The fourteen stories explore society through the lens of ethnicity, class, friendship, family conflict, and generational friction. Believable, quirky characters, young and old, inhabit the stories.'--Albuquerque Journal
Skinner's stories are smart and colloquial, conflicted and comical. . . . He doesn't pull punches with roles and he allows the individuals he follows to roam outside the box of assumed roles.'--Austin American-Statesman
José Skinner's long-awaited second collection measures up to, and indeed surpasses, his critically acclaimed debut Flight and Other Stories. . . . Such dazzling storytelling was worth the wait.'--Rigoberto González, NBC News Latino
The authenticity of José Skinner's experiences as a Spanish/English interpreter in the courtrooms of the Southwest hit harder than an NFL linebacker.'--Latina
With verisimilitude, compassion, and a surprising amount of nobility, Skinner navigates the mean streets of New Mexico with cunning and grace.'--Kirkus Reviews
A rare and stunning collection. These are powerful and necessary stories that we've gone too long without, and now that Skinner has brought them to us in such shimmering prose and unflinching empathy, we are in his debt.'
--Bret Anthony Johnston, author of Remember Me Like This: A Novel and Corpus Christi: Stories
José Skinner is the author of Flight and Other Stories, a graduate of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, and the former director of the MFA program in creative writing at the University of Texas-Pan American. He lives in Austin, Texas.