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The Wolf Hunt review: How well do you really know the people you love?

A lovely novel overall but Gundar-Goshen may have wrapped up the plot all too rapidly and expediently

September 8, 2023 11:30
Ayelet G-G Tal Shahar 220321 0061
2 min read

The Wolf Hunt by Ayelet Gundar-Goshen
Pushkin Press, £16.99
Reviewed by Jenni Frazer

Ayelet Gundar-Goshen is an Israeli novelist and psychologist whose speciality, I think, is displacement — more specifically the understanding of what it is like to be in another’s shoes, and the choices that emanate from that.

Her first novel, which found great success internationally, was the magic realist-flavoured One Night, Markovitch, inspired by the sham marriages in the late 1930s between Jewish men from mandate-era Palestine and Jewish women from Europe on the eve of the Holocaust. Waking Lions, her second, pivoted on the frenzied scrabbling for justification after a hit-and-run accident.

Now, in her fourth novel, The Wolf Hunt, she examines a different kind of displacement: of Israelis who leave their country for America, and of a teenager with a limited understanding of the parameters of freedom.

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