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The Madman's Tale: A Novel
 
 

The Madman's Tale: A Novel [Hardcover]

John Katzenbach
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)

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From Publishers Weekly

The conceit of this impossible-to-put-down thriller—the story of the hunt for a serial killer-rapist who has concealed himself among a psychiatric asylum's insane—is that it was written in pencil by a madman on the walls of his apartment. More than 20 years ago, Francis Xavier Petrel, nicknamed C-Bird for the seabird his name evokes, was confined against his will in the Western State Hospital, a run-down residential mental health facility that rivals Kesey's Cuckoo's Nest for evil administrators and whacked-out inmates. A shy, frightened 21-year-old who endures a cacophony of disembodied voices, C-Bird is befriended by Peter the Fireman, nicknamed for the church he burned down with a pedophile priest still inside. (C-Bird and Peter appear almost normal amid the hospital's other catatonics, manic-depressives, psychopaths and psychotics.) Then they discover the raped and mutilated body of nurse Short Blond (nicknamed for her hair) stuffed into a storage closet. All evidence points to paranoid-schizophrenic inmate Lanky, who earlier in the day had identified Short Blond as an agent of evil, but Lanky claims the killing was the work of an invisible Angel of Death who committed the crime to save them from some unspecified devilish fate. C-Bird and Peter, knowing that Lanky has been unjustly accused, set out to find the real killer. They are joined by state prosecutor Lucy Kyoto Jones, who believes the killer is the same man who has committed other savage crimes beyond the walls of the hospital. Katzenbach (author of the bestsellers Just Cause and The Analyst) delivers an uplifting story of justice, friendship, mystery and, above all, the courage of certain men and women who rise up, no matter the circumstances, to defeat evil, no matter the consequences.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

The narrator isn't exactly a madman but, rather, someone whose madness is quieted by meds. "It is a very hard thing, in this time of ours, to be mad and middle-aged," hero Francis Petrel writes early on. Perhaps the best feature of veteran crime writer Katzenbach's latest is the way he fleshes out the everyday desperation of someone living on the fringes of society. Petrel receives an invitation to a reunion of former "guests" of the insane asylum his parents consigned him to as a teenager. This not very credible plot starter leads Petrel to investigate what horrors led to the hospital's closing, his thoughts especially revolving around the unsolved murder of a nurse. Intriguing, but far too long and too encumbered with Petrel's Byzantine thoughts to generate suspense. Still, the Edgar-nominated Katzenbach has a following, and this introspective tale will interest those who don't read thrillers for the thrills. Connie Fletcher
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

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I can no longer hear my voices, so I am a little lost. Read the first page
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5.0 out of 5 stars Katzenbach at his best, July 10 2004
By 
Eileen Rieback (Coral Springs, FL USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Madman's Tale: A Novel (Hardcover)
In "The Madman's Tale," John Katzenbach has produced a well-written thriller with an unusual protagonist and an eerie setting. Francis "C-Bird" Petrel is a former patient of a state mental hospital who recounts a series of unsolved murders that occurred at the asylum years ago. The narrative weaves together the present and past as Francis revisits the closed-down asylum for a series of lectures and then grapples with the memories and internal voices of his past. He decides to write down, in pencil on the walls of his apartment, the story of life in the asylum and his role in helping track down the serial killer known simply as "The Angel." As Francis composes his tale, his madness threatens to resurface and prevent him from completing the story.

After being committed to the hospital at the age of 21 following a violent outburst against his family, Francis struggled to adjust to institutional life. He was befriended by Peter the Fireman, a former arson investigator under psychiatric evaluation for setting fire to a church. Fellow inmate Lanky announced that an angel visited him and commanded him to stamp out evil. Lanky was found with the blood of a slain nurse on his clothing and was accused of the murder. Prosecuting attorney Lucy Jones visited the hospital because of similarities between this murder and those against other women that had previously occurred outside the confines of the hospital. She felt that Lanky was wrongly accused and that the murder was the work of a serial killer now hiding out in the asylum. She called upon Francis and Peter to help her track down the killer among the institution inmates.

Lucy and her helpers soon discovered that finding a murderer in a mental institution was no easy matter. The usual investigative techniques did not work. How can they find a psychopath among thousands of psychotics and other mentally ill patients? What is considered suspicious behavior in a place where the abnormal is normal and where the illogical is routine? Are they looking for signs of sanity or insanity in a suspect? How can they interview witnesses or suspects without setting off a disruption of the institutional routine that could upset the inmates?

Katzenbach provides a powerful portrayal of the despair and hopelessness of asylum life through an array of disillusioned inmates and bureaucratic medical staff. He includes touching portraits of a would-be Napoleon and a would-be Cleopatra who befriend Francis. Through schizophrenics, catatonics, psychotics, and the delusional, he portrays inmates who rely on medications to keep mental demons at bay and who often lose the battle to regain sanity and reentry into the outside world. With echoes of "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest," this book is a fascinating, eerie, and suspenseful must-read.

Eileen Rieback

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5.0 out of 5 stars Mystery in a Madhouse, July 13 2004
By 
J. Stoneberg "bookluvr" (Lawrenceville, GA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Madman's Tale: A Novel (Hardcover)
This story of a murder in an institution is told by one of the patients that experienced the events. He decides to tell the story and begins writing it on the white walls of his apartment.

The tale moves between present day, as his obsession with telling the story leads to a decline in his mental health; to the events that happened 20 years earlier when he was involuntarily committed by his parents to Western State Hospital.

This is a mystery with the added twist of being set in a mental hospital, where reality is as flimsy as a hospital gown. The administration believes the patient the police arrested has committed the crime and gives little credence to the investigator from the D.A. who arrives on the trail of an apparent serial killer. The investigator, a beautiful young woman with a mysterious scar across her face, enlists Francis Petrol, the narrator, and Peter an ex-firefighter who is being evaluated at Western.

We get to know several of the patients that Francis befriends while he attempts to navigate the strange world of the mental hospital. Francis sees the loneliness and sadness inside many of these patients, and indeed these emotions are a part of him as well.

Very enjoyable!

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5.0 out of 5 stars A smart, creepy thriller., July 7 2004
This review is from: The Madman's Tale: A Novel (Hardcover)
In 1979 Francis Petrel was committed to the Western State Hospital for his erratic behavior. Surrounded by medicated zombies, Francis, desperate to stop the voices in his head, makes friends with several inmates: an ex-fireman with a thirst for fire, a would-be Napoleon and a man who imagines devils. But, as the men open up to each other, a shocking crime will force them to confront the fact that a killer may be among them.

A nurse is found sexually assaulted and brutally murdered late one night after lights-out. The police suspect an inmate, while the patients talk of a white-shrouded "angel" lurking the halls at night. A mysterious prosecuting attorney arrives with her own theory about the killing, but after more bodies are discovered she realizes that someone is turning the madhouse in a slaughterhouse.

Twenty-years later the doors of the Western State Hospital are being closed for good and Francis, now living in an apartment and taking his meds to keep the "voices" quiet, needs to tell the story of the nightmarish days at the hospital. Armed with his pencil, Francis begins writing everything he remembers about the murders, but since the crimes were never solved he fears his story will remain unfinished, until the killer returns...with a vengeance.

'The Madman's Tale' is a shocking thriller. A creepy mental hospital is the setting for a twisted story about broken individuals and how far their illnesses will push them. The plot twists will keep readers turning the pages and the narrative will keep them guessing as the journey through the main character's mind is unpredictable and spooky.

John Katzenbach has been writing original thrillers for years and his newest is one of his finest. 'The Madman's Tale' is the perfect book for readers looking for a smart, intricately plotted thriller.

Nick Gonnella

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