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THE WOLF HUNT by Ayelet Gundar-Goshen

THE WOLF HUNT

by Ayelet Gundar-Goshen ; translated by Sondra Silverston

Pub Date: Aug. 15th, 2023
ISBN: 9780316423472
Publisher: Little, Brown

The dark experiences of an Israeli immigrant family in “one of the greenest, quietest, safest cities in America.”

Israeli-born Lilach and Mikhael Shuster “raised an American child who went to high school with American children, and now they say he killed another American child,” we learn in the first pages of Gundar-Goshen’s third novel. Like many of the husbands in their neighborhood, Mikhael works in tech, but “while other companies in Silicon Valley developed apps for internet shopping, the company Mikhael worked for developed security products, which was a nice way of saying ‘weapons.’ ” As for the women, Lilach wryly notes, “there were sleep consultants and breastfeeding con­sultants and toilet-training consultants. There were also couples therapists and art therapists. But the people who provided real care were the Hispanic women who came to our houses every day by public transportation. They took care of the art therapists’ children while the art therapists were taking care of the couples therapists’ children.” Lilach’s alienation and anxiety escalate when there is a violent attack on a local synagogue, then skyrocket when a Black teenager dies at a party and her son, Adam, becomes the prime suspect. Like the other Jewish mothers in the community, she has signed Adam up to take self-defense classes with an Israeli named Uri Ziv, rumored to be ex-Mossad. Adam worships Uri, who also becomes very close with Mikhael and gets a job at his company; as the family is targeted, Uri becomes their protector. But should they trust him? Gundar-Goshen navigates the landscape of racial prejudice, particularly the tension between Jews and the Nation of Islam, through the eyes of an Israeli immigrant who is already scarred by experiences of terrorism in Israel. Sexual identity and bullying also play roles in the plot, which moves uneasily to a conclusion that leaves some questions unanswered. Gundar-Goshen solidifies her brand with this ambitious novel, her first set in the United States.

Flawed but relatable characters and off-the-charts emotional intensity with a sharply evoked Israeli cultural perspective.