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The Chalk Man
The Chalk Man
Author: C. J. Tudor
In 1986, Eddie and his friends are just kids on the verge of adolescence. They spend their days biking around their sleepy English village and looking for any taste of excitement they can get. The chalk men are their secret code: little chalk stick figures they leave for one another as messages only they can understand. But then a mysterious cha...  more »
ISBN-13: 9781524760991
ISBN-10: 1524760994
Publication Date: 12/31/2018
Pages: 304
Edition: Reprint
Rating:
  • Currently 4/5 Stars.
 8

4 stars, based on 8 ratings
Publisher: Broadway Books
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover, Audio CD
Members Wishing: 0
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review
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reviewed The Chalk Man on + 8 more book reviews
Interesting story
perryfran avatar reviewed The Chalk Man on + 1223 more book reviews
Really enjoyed this engrossing murder mystery. It reminded me somewhat of some of Stephen King's works involving a group of young people coming of age and running into very strange occurrences. The novel takes place in Britain and is written from two different points in time, 1986, when the group of kids were about 12, and 2016, when they are grown. This is similar to King's IT which also tells the story from two different times. The main protagonist, Eddie, tells the story and how it started in 1986. He is one of a group of five who hang out together and try to be there for each other. After Eddie meets with a somewhat strange teacher, Mr. Halloran, who uses pastels to draw beautiful art pieces, Eddie and the group start using chalk men to send coded messages to each other. Halloran is an albino and is also called "The Chalk Man". At one point during the summer, they witness a horrible accident at the fair where a young girl gets mutilated by a park ride called a Waltzer (I had never heard of this ride but found out online that it is a British ride consisting of a number of cars which spin freely while rotating around a central point). The girl survives but is later found murdered in the woods by Eddie and his friends. Crudely drawn chalk men were drawn pointing the way to the body. But who drew these men and how is Halloran involved? The mystery remains unanswered for years until events in 2016 lead to what really happened.

I liked how the two different time lines are used in the novel to tell the story. There were several twists along the way and I was surprised by the ending. Overall, I thought this was very good thriller with some tinges of horror thrown in. Recommend it...
reviewed The Chalk Man on + 204 more book reviews
Excellent book. Well written and well thought out plot.
Readnmachine avatar reviewed The Chalk Man on + 1474 more book reviews
Parts of this twisty, well-plotted thriller are inevitably going to be compared to "Stand By Me", since it involves a small group of pre-teen buddies finding the body of a murdered girl in the woods. But it's not a true comparison, because in this work, the echoes of the crime resound through their lives for 30 years, and the tendrils that twined the group together never really let go.

Tudor has chosen to present the story by flashing back and forth between the period when the body was found and the characters' present day -- a technique not quite as annoying as it might have been, because it allows key bits of information to be doled out at the most appropriate times to keep the reader engaged and guessing. I found the early parts of the book a bit of a hard go at first, but the final 75 pages or so were definitely un-put-downable.

There's a fairly large cast of characters, not all of whom are carefully drawn. Some of the parents, particularly, are vague presences. This would normally not be an issue in a book about children's friendships, but in this case, the parents come in and out of the story throughout. Some of the British-isms may make give readers accustomed to American English a bit of a brain-stutter, but they're not overwhelming.

The mysteries (there are more than one) are nicely plotted, and the twist at the end may not be as big a surprise as the promotions promise, particularly if one is familiar with the concept of an unreliable narrator. Because Eddie, who is the exclusive POV character, isn't always forthcoming. He lies to his parents (what 12-year-old boy doesn't?), he steals things -- sometimes the things most kids steal like candy or small toys, but also things he really has no use for like a stray earring and a china figurine -- just because he wants them for his "collections". And the adult Ed is a solitary, somewhat neurotic man, still living in his childhood home and still unable to lay the ghosts that haunted his childhood.

The motif of the chalk man is nicely used throughout. Something that started as a secret code within the group becomes more and more menacing as the contemporary sections of the book unspool. It's an interesting device, with just enough unanswered questions about who is leaving them and why.

Overall, it's a fine read once it gets into gear. I'll be looking for more from this author.
IlliniAlum83 avatar reviewed The Chalk Man on + 181 more book reviews
Descriptions of this book first reminded me of 'It', but the horror of this story lies in the real life tragedies this young foursome experience. This is a story told in two time periods, bouncing between 1986 and 2016. The chapter titles list the year so there is no confusion about which time period you are reading about.

In 1986, the story describes a terrifying amusement park ride malfunction whose aftermath bonds Eddie with their new teacher who is an albino. With the teacher's recommendation, the kids develop their own coded message system using 'chalk men'. When mysterious deaths start occurring, the group breaks up.

Thirty years later, the cold case deaths resurrect when the gang receives ' chalk men' messages amid an opportunity to publish the story of the young teen they discovered murdered all those years ago. The group reunites to discover who or what was behind the multiple deaths, but all those years later, their safety isnt assured.

I really liked this creepy story as an October read. Possible 'trigger' topics include child abuse, rape, alcoholism, bullying, disfigurement.

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