Seoul, South Korea
Sae met her husband in a riot. As student protesters in the eighties, they railed against the corporations that led South Korea out of post-war depression. Now, with two children, her hard-hitting journalism behind her, she waits for Jae to come home from work. And waits.
That was the day the tower fell.
As Sae joins crowds of mourners demonstrating at the site, the company responsible for the criminally unsound engineering - Daehan Corp - walks free. Hundreds of lives are still buried in the rubble; and with them, Sae soon realises, are secrets. Jae - sweet, dependable Jae - was keeping something from her.
Determined to get justice, Sae takes a job as biographer to Daehan's Chairman. His career spans the country's rise to superpower, but his family shows the strain of sacrifice. Even as Sae resists the Chairman's seductive version of history, she surrenders her sons to her new obsession.
For Sae has a plan. She will expose the Chairman who enslaved a country to his greed. She will find out why Jae was in the tower that day. But the deeper she digs, the closer she gets to a dangerous design. One that will rock the story of her life, and bring it crashing down around her.
A blazing portrait of South Korea and a novel of heart-stopping suspense, A Buried Life asks how truth can be proved in a climate of oppression, whether family can be sacrificed to progress and who writes our history.
Read MoreA writer capable of exploring big ideas - GuardianMichell's portrait of Seoul fascinates: its dust and neon, sweat and suspicion . . . An author worth watching - Daily Mail, on The DefectionsThis stunning first novel is a fascinating portrait of a divided country, seething with prejudice and intrigue; Michell, who grew up in Seoul, takes the reader deep into the desperate, dangerous underground - The Times, on The DefectionsExcellent . . . Written in crisp prose, Michell's novel deftly weaves the tale of Mia's torrid romance with the political history of the Korean peninsula - Independent on Sunday, on The DefectionsOne of the most compelling, haunting and thrilling debuts I have ever read. It is a book of betrayals and borders, real and imagined, and of deceptions and desires which beautifully and dramatically evokes the spectres of Korea's past and the divisions of its present - David Peace, on The DefectionsThe author grew up in Seoul and has used her own experience as an outsider to write this fantastic first novel . . . The thriller element of the story moves at a belting pace - Saga, on The Defections
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