The Transplant
Format:
Paperback
En stock
0.16 kg
Sí
Nuevo
Amazon
USA
- Two brothers. One failing body. One decision that cannot be undone. Samuel Hart and Michael Hart are identical twins who share blood, history, and very little else. They have been estranged for more than twenty years, separated not by a single argument or dramatic betrayal, but by something quieter and more corrosive: a lifetime of imbalance, blame, and need that always moved in one direction. When Michael contacts Samuel after decades of silence, it is not to reconnect. His liver is failing. Samuel is a match. What follows is not a story of reconciliation, forgiveness, or rediscovered brotherhood. The Transplant is a grounded, unsentimental novel about consent under pressure, bodily autonomy, and the moral weight of family obligation. As doctors outline risks, timelines, and probabilities, the brothers are forced to confront a shared past that has never been honestly accounted for—and a future that will be shaped by a single irreversible choice. Samuel is a man who learned early how to endure. Bigger, quieter, and expected to absorb consequences, he built his adult life around distance and control. Michael learned a different lesson: how to survive by calling for help at the right moment, how to let urgency redirect blame, how to mistake need for entitlement. Illness strips those strategies down to their core and leaves both men exposed in ways neither can fully manage. Set primarily within hospitals, recovery rooms, and the private aftermath of surgery, The Transplant explores questions most family dramas avoid. Does shared blood create moral debt? Is refusing to save someone the same as harming them? Can consent exist when the cost of refusal is death? And once a body is given, who owns the future that follows? Written with restraint, darkly observant humor, and an insistence on physical realism, this novel rejects easy answers. There are no speeches that fix the past, no redemptive arcs that erase damage by naming it. What remains instead is consequence—lived, maintained, and carried forward without ceremony. The Transplant is a novel about boundaries rather than reconciliation, about distance chosen rather than imposed. It understands survival not as triumph, but as obligation, and examines the quiet, exacting work required to live with a choice that cannot be reclaimed—only honored. For readers drawn to literary fiction that confronts family dynamics, medical ethics, and moral ambiguity without sentimentality, The Transplant offers a powerful, disciplined examination of what it truly means to say yes—and what it costs to do so.
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