The Sky Man (1910) is a novel by Henry Kitchell Webster. Written at
the height of Webster's career as a popular author of magazine serials,
The Sky Man is a story of invention, mystery, and murder. Inspired by
recent advances in human aviation, Webster crafted a thrilling work of
science fiction that continues to entertain and astound over a century
after it appeared in print. "For many hours--Cayley was too much of a
god today to bother with the exact number of them--he had been flying
slowly northward down a mild southerly breeze. Hundreds of feet below
him was the dazzling, terrible expanse of the polar ice pack which
shrouds the northern limits of the Arctic Ocean in its impenetrable veil
of mystery." Looking on the world below, Philip Cayley entertains
thoughts he has never had before. Is he human, or something greater?
What limits stand before him now that he has mastered the sky? A
seasoned veteran of the United States army, Cayley is an aviator and
self-taught inventor who struggled for years to perfect human flight.
Now equipped with an aerodynamic wingsuit, he soars above the Arctic on
a research mission. Crossing the expanse of ice, he sees a man below in
similar leather clothing. Behind him, a group of men in walrus skin
jackets begins to gain ground. From the safety of the sky, Cayley
watches in horror as the man in the lead is struck by a deadly dart,
tumbling down an immeasurable crevasse. Careful to avoid discovery,
Cayley circles back to his ship, entirely unprepared for what lies
ahead. With a beautifully designed cover and professionally typeset
manuscript, this edition of Henry Kitchell Webster's The Sky Man is a
classic of American literature reimagined for modern readers.