Waking Lions

As seen:
By Ayelet Gundar-Goshen, and and, Sondra Silverston
avg rating
2 reviews
‘Gripping . . . twists and turns like a thriller’ Sunday Times
‘Brave and startling’ Financial Times
‘Classy . . . suspenseful’ The Times
‘I loved everything about it’ Daily Mail
‘Exhilarating’ Guardian
Dr Eitan Green is a good man. He saves lives. Then, speeding along a deserted moonlit road in his SUV after an exhausting hospital shift, he hits someone. Seeing that the man, an African migrant, is beyond help, he flees the scene. It is a decision that changes everything. Because the dead man’s wife knows what happened. And her price is not money. It is something else entirely.
A gripping, suspenseful and morally devastating drama of guilt and survival, shame and desire. It looks at the darkness inside all of us to ask: what would we do? What are any of us capable of?
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Waking Lions is a beautifully translated, slow-burning drama that raises lots of moral dilemmas and was great as a reading group book. It's about an honest, well-meaning surgeon being made to pay for a hit and run that the dead man's wife witnessed. We weren't convinced, given the described moral strength of both the surgeon and his detective wife, that they would either have been banished in the first place or would have left the Eritrean to die. There were other aspects of the story that also felt a little contrived, and at times it was quite wordy, but putting...
Read more...Firstly, I think the book's basic idea raises an interesting ethical question - can we know how we would react in any given situation? I'm sure many of us have been in the position where we do something in frustration or anger and think "how could I have said/done that?", hopefully not to the extent of being a hit and run driver, but who knows? I thought it was a well-written/translated study of how individuals at the top of the heap can be dehumanised, or driven to do criminal things out of fear of being found out, while those at...
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