In the rain-soaked logging country of Washington's tidewater coast, Caleb Raines comes of age among men shaped by hard labor, silence, and inherited violence. As rivers change, hillsides begin to slide, and young women go missing, the county learns how to look away.
Drawn into a world of loggers, drifters, outcasts, and women forced to navigate the threat of male power, Caleb must confront the brutal code that formed him. Around him, fathers pass down hardness as duty, men excuse what should never be excused, and the beauty of the land stands in terrible contrast to the damage done upon it.
Dark, lyrical, and morally unflinching, Under All Names is a literary novel about grief, complicity, inheritance, and the terrible cost of refusing to see.