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A Better Ending

A Brother's Twenty-Year Quest to Uncover the Truth About His Sister's Death

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0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 4 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 4 weeks
For fans of We Keep the Dead Close and The Night of the Gun, a propulsive and moving memoir about a brother's decades-long investigation into the circumstances surrounding his sister's tragic death—and his own journey to forgiveness and closure.
On a summer evening in 1974, Jim Thomson arrived home from a baseball game to the news that his younger sister, Eileen, had taken her own life. To Jim, his parents, and his brother, Keith, the loss was unexpected and devastating. Only twenty-seven years old, Eileen had been living in California with her high school sweetheart, Vic, a cop, surrounded by a circle of close friends and working at a job she loved. It seemed unfathomable that she would kill herself, but as the family gathered in Pittsburgh to say goodbye, more details emerged that seemed to explain the tragedy: Eileen had confided in her parents that she had been suffering from depression, and her storybook marriage had been plagued by bitter fights, infidelity, and guilt. When Jim eventually sat down with his brother-in-law to talk about the final hours of Eileen's life, Vic looked him in the eye and explained that he had stormed out of the room in the midst of a volatile argument. Moments later, a gunshot went off. Sensing no lies or evasion, Jim believed him. He recounted the story to the rest of the family, and they got on with their lives as best they could.

Twenty-seven years later, with all of his family passed away, Eileen's death began to nag at Jim. Now a writer, he wanted to fill in the blanks of her story and answer the questions that were plaguing him. What had the final months of Eileen's life been like? Why had she not told him about her troubles? How had the infidelity in her marriage brought her and Vic to that fateful day, and who else had been a part of it? What other demons had she been battling?

Determined to uncover the truth, Jim hired a private investigator to help him. Together, they tracked down Eileen's old friends and clandestinely obtained copies of police reports, which revealed that Vic and Eileen's relationship—and the sheriff's investigation that followed her death—was much darker and more complicated than they had imagined. Torn by doubt, Jim began a two-decade journey that took him from the streets of Pittsburgh to the hills of San Bernardino, leading him into a tangled web of secrecy, deception, and shifting stories that forced him to reconsider everything he thought he knew about Vic, Eileen, and himself—and to confront the chilling question of whether his sister had really taken her own life.

Told with the precision and pace of a whodunit and the searing emotion of a family saga, A Better Ending is an unforgettable tale about the love between siblings, the murkiness of truth and memory, and the path to acceptance.
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    • Booklist

      February 1, 2025
      In 1974, Thomson's younger sister Eileen died by suicide. They had grown apart as adults, but Eileen was a crucial part of the author's world. The tragedy came as a shock to the family--Eileen was a happy young woman with a husband she adored. Three decades later, Thomson questions whether the accepted story was really the truth. His investigation throws him into the past as he tries to reconstruct the final months of Eileen's life. Though he hires a private investigator, Thomson becomes a capable amateur detective himself, curiosity spiraling into obsession as he hones his forensic skills and follows a trail of startling clues. The volatility of Eileen's marriage had been an open secret, but no one understood how violent it really was. Guilt drives the work as Thomson struggles to understand who ultimately bears responsibility for Eileen's death and whether he--or anyone--could have helped her. Thomson's clear, plainspoken voice lends itself well to the story at hand. Raising more questions than it answers, this true crime autobiography offers a fascinating entry into the genre.

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Kirkus

      February 15, 2025
      A whodunit that hits close to home. Novelist Thomson began work on this book about the death of his younger sister, Eileen, in 2001, more than two decades after her alleged suicide in September 1974. While attempting to fictionalize the tragedy, he had a sudden realization: There was no reason to believe the official story that, feeling remorse over an affair and guilt over two miscarriages, Eileen had shot herself in the heart during a heated argument with her husband, Vic, a police officer. One discordant fact about the incident gnawed at him: His parents had received a hopeful letter from Eileen, written and sent on the day of her death, giving no indication that she was feeling suicidal. Deciding he was writing about his own long-suppressed doubts about the case, Thomson hired a private investigator in Los Angeles (the death occurred 60 miles east, in San Bernardino) to try to get at the truth. What they find in the record and interviews of surviving witnesses shakes Thomson to his core. He begins to question not only the facts he had long trusted but also the flaws in his own character that made him trust those facts for so long. He sees parallels in his own history--alcoholism, adultery, domestic violence--echoing in Eileen's tragically short life. These ruminations and doubts give this memoir a depth lacking in many true-crime stories. Parts of the book closely resemble that genre in tone and atmosphere and leave the reader guessing up to the climatic confrontation between Thomson and his former brother-in-law at a Seattle restaurant in 2004. The tortured, philosophical self-examination can sometimes feel like another book entirely, but it's essential to the book's arguments about the nature of truth and the dread of uncertainty. A sometimes uneven but ultimately provocative read.

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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