The heavens may fall

Allen Eskens, 1963-

Book - 2016

"FEATURING THREE CHARACTERS FROM THE BESTSELLING BOOK-CLUB FAVORITE THE LIFE WE BURY, THIS NOVEL EXPLORES A RIVETING MURDER CASE TOLD FROM TWO OPPOSING PERSPECTIVES. Detective Max Rupert and attorney Boady Sanden's friendship is being pushed to the breaking point. Max is convinced that Jennavieve Pruitt was killed by her husband, Ben. Boady is equally convinced that Ben, his client, is innocent. As the case unfolds, the two are forced to confront their own personal demons. Max is still struggling with the death of his wife four years earlier, and the Pruitt case stirs up old memories. Boady hasn't taken on a defense case since the death of an innocent client, a man Boady believes he could have saved but didn't. Now he ...is back in court, with student Lila Nash at his side, and he's determined to redeem himself for having failed in the past. Vividly told from two opposing perspectives, the truth about the stunning death of Jennavieve Pruitt remains a mystery until the very end"--

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Subjects
Genres
Detective and mystery fiction
Published
Amherst, NY : Seventh Street Books, an imprint of Prometheus Books 2016.
Language
English
Main Author
Allen Eskens, 1963- (author)
Physical Description
301 pages ; 21 cm
ISBN
9781633882058
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Minneapolis Detective Max Rupert is certain that high-powered lawyer Ben Pruitt murdered his wife, a member of one of the area's most prominent and wealthy families. Rupert's close friend, law professor Boady Sanden, is just as certain that his former colleague Pruitt is innocent, so he agrees to defend him. Rupert has a history with Pruitt, who once made a false accusation against him in court, and matters are further complicated for the detective when he gets some distracting information about the death of his own wife four years earlier. A key element in the murder investigation is whether Pruitt, who was attending a law conference in Chicago on the night his wife died, could have driven back to kill her. An attorney with two successful crime novels under his belt, Eskens here shows that he can write legal thrillers with the best of them, using characters introduced in his debut, The Life We Bury (2014), and building tension and plot twists up to the very end.--Leber, Michele Copyright 2016 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Edgar-finalist Eskens's gripping third mystery featuring homicide detective Max Rupert (after 2015's The Guise of Another) pits Max against defense attorney Boady Sanden, a longtime friend, in a criminal case. Boady is defending attorney Ben Pruitt, who's on trial for the murder of his wife, Jennavieve. Jennavieve was stabbed to death at night in her Minneapolis home while Ben was at a meeting in Chicago. Was there just enough time for Ben to drive home, kill his wife, and get back by morning? A witness saw a red car park in front of the house at midnight-did Ben have access to a red car? Although Max is distracted by new information on the death of his own wife four years earlier, he pulls together the case against Ben at the insistence of prosecutor Frank Dovey, who's altogether too eager to put it before a grand jury. Eskens keeps the reader guessing as the tale takes several unexpected twists before reaching the satisfying denouement. Agent: Amy Cloughley, Kimberley Cameron Agency. (Oct.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A grieving detective and a self-doubting lawyer face off in a courtroom. The last thing Max Rupert wants is to catch a homicide case on the anniversary of his wife Jennis hit-and-run death. But hes determined to do right by the unidentified dead woman found in an alley with stab wounds in her neck and a childs blanket wrapped around her. Max uses his wits and a pair of registered diamond earrings to trace the victims identity. She was the wealthy and influential Jennavieve Pruitt, the force behind a foundation to save wetlands. When the police search her home, they find a shadow box missing a two-edged dagger and an inscription that reads, For carving out more protected land. Although its likely one of the developers whom Jennavieve prevented from building on his own land, whonbsp;could have killed her, Max is under pressure to build a case against Ben, Jennavieves husband, who wasnt even in town the night of the murder. That doesnt discourage an ambitious assistant Hennepin County attorney in league with Jennavieves sister, who has her own motive for murder and her own reasons for getting Ben charged with the crime instead. But they havent reckoned with Bens friend and former law partner, Professor Boady Sanden, whos still recovering from a case that left him so shaken he swore hed never practice law again. Ben coaxes Boady back into practice to defend him, even though Boady and Max are friends, too. But more than friendship is on the line as Bens case heads to trial, Max thinks he has a break in his wifes cold case, and the momentum finally starts building in this sideways sequel to The Life We Bury (2014). A previously secondary character, Eskens' broken-hearted hero finally has the spotlight the third time out. Its too bad he has to fight his way through so much back story to get there. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.