
The Quiet Boy
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Narrated by:
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William DeMeritt
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By:
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Ben H. Winters
From the best-selling author of Underground Airlines and Golden State, this sweeping legal thriller follows a 16-year-old who suffers from a neurological condition that has frozen him in time - and the team of lawyers, doctors, and detectives who are desperate to wake him up.
In 2008, a cheerful ambulance-chasing lawyer named Jay Shenk persuades the grieving Keener family to sue a private LA hospital. Their son, Wesley, has been transformed by a routine surgery into a kind of golem, absent all normal functioning or personality, walking in endless empty circles around his hospital room.
In 2019, Shenk - still in practice but a shell of his former self - is hired to defend Wesley Keener’s father when he is charged with murder...the murder, as it turns out, of the expert witness from the 2008 hospital case. Shenk’s adopted son, a fragile teenager in 2008, is a wayward adult, though he may find his purpose when he investigates what really happened to the murdered witness.
Two thrilling trials braid together, medical malpractice and murder, jostling us back and forth in time.
The Quiet Boy is a book full of mysteries, not only about the death of a brilliant scientist, not only about the outcome of the medical malpractice suit, but about the relationship between children and their parents, between the past and the present, between truth and lies. At the center of it all is Wesley Keener, endlessly walking, staring empty-eyed, in whose quiet, hollow body may lie the fate of humankind.
©2021 Ben H. Winters (P)2021 Mulholland BooksListeners also enjoyed...





















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Almost great
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Think twice
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Very abrupt ending!
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The Quiet Boy, however, is simply our world, but with one inexplicable event - a teenage boy who, after a head injury and emergency surgery becomes something new, something completely unexplainable. The world is fascinated, but of course slowly loses interest. The people directly affected, however, will never be the same.
Another winner from Winters
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Couldn’t get into it
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enjoyable mystery
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Awkward Read
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The narrator isn't great.
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Started Strong, Then Fell Apart
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Told from alternating perspectives, The Quiet Boy explores the tensions between justice and compassion, in heart-pounding prose. With clever plotting, and a knack for character, Winters expertly weaves a group of misfits together in a race to save themselves, and an innocent life.
This is a double-timeline book about at the same small group of characters 10 years apart. In 2009 teenage Wesley Keener gets a brain injury and after emergency surgery has an inexplicable condition. It's basically a walking coma. His mind is not there, and all he does is walk around slowly in circles. Inexplicably, he doesn't eat, excrete, grow or age. In 2019, with everyone still recovering from the way things unraveled a decade ago, intrepid and failed ambulance-chasing lawyer, Jay Shenk's son Ruben, who watched much of the earlier case unfold as a teenager, and now as an adult is enlisted by his father to gather evidence for the new case involving Wesley's father.
Incredibly well written, as are all Winter's novels, but I prefer the police procedural over the legal drama. I wanted to like Jay Schenk, because he is trying to do the right thing for the Keener family, but it's for the wrong reason. He wants to win the case against the doctors and hospital for the huge windfall of cash.
I prefer police procedural over legal thrillers
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