

He is the recipient of the Barry Award, Minnesota Book Award, Rosebud Award, and the Silver Falchion Award and has been a finalist for the Edgar® Award, Thriller Award, and Anthony Award. But in the end, it is the bond between Joe and his brother Jeremy that gives this novel its big (albeit tormented) heart.Īllen Eskens is the USA Today-bestselling author of The Life We Bury, The Guise of Another, The Heavens May Fall and The Deep Dark Descending. The Life We Bury is full of tension, twists and turns, and has a powerful, climactic ending sure to gratify. The power of that guilt weighs heavily upon Joe and will demand a resolution of its own. Throughout the novel, Joe has to intercede to protect his brother and is conflicted every time he has to once again leave his brother behind. Joe is torn by the guilt of going to college and abandoning his brother. To complicate things, Joe's bipolar, alcoholic mother has taken up with a low-life who hits Joe's eighteen-year-old autistic brother. Carl agrees to tell Joe his story, and Joe sets out to unravel the tapestry of the thirty-year-old murder. At a nursing home he meets Carl Iverson, a man dying of cancer who has been medically paroled after spending thirty years in prison for the murder of a fourteen-year-old girl.

This character served with the accused murderer of a 14-year-old girl in the Vietnam war and is one of the accused murderer's biggest supporters.The Life We Bury tells the story of Joe Talbert, a junior at the University of Minnesota, who receives a class assignment to write a biography of someone who has lived an interesting life. This character is an 18-year-old with autism who inadvertently helps to solve the mystery of who killed a 14-year-old girl 30 years ago.

This 14-year-old ties the main characters of the novel together in an unusual way even though she are not an active character. This person is a college student and lives in the protagonist's apartment building. This person does not allow others to get emotionally close.

This person has both killed and murdered and is currently dying of cancer in a nursing home. This character is a college student who must balance caring for a sibling, a bipolar mother, and work while writing a biography for an English class.
