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Night of Broken Souls
 
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Night of Broken Souls (Mass Market Paperback)

by Thomas F. Monteleone (Author)
2.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
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From Library Journal

After Manhattan psychiatrist J. Michael Keating rescues a suicidal young woman wielding a gun, he discovers that she is part of a puzzling phenomenon. Average citizens all over the world have begun suffering blackouts and vivid nightmares of death at Nazi extermination camps such as Auschwitz and Treblinka. When Keating and his assistant-turned-lover Pamela connect with Rabbi Irwin Klingerman, who has amassed research on the unusual memories, the three plan a symposium for the "reincarnated." An eerie similarity permeates everyone's memories: a sadistic, ghoulish man known only as Der kleine Engel. At the symposium in New York City, the group faces recycled horror as evil personified erupts and seeks a showdown with Good. This Jesuit-educated author of The Resurrectionist (LJ 11/15/95) has a gift for complex characters. For most public library collections, particularly where Christian fiction circulates well.?Susan A. Zappia, Maricopa Cty. Lib. Dist., Phoenix
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


From Kirkus Reviews

Monteleone's 21st supernatural suspenser (The Resurrectionist, 1995, etc.) is his best-plotted and most effective in several years. Many psychiatrists have noticed a similarity in the nightmares of their patients. These terrified people, it seems, have been invaded by the reincarnated souls of Nazi death camp victims, reliving the childhoods of Polish or Czech victims, their arrests, deportation to Auschwitz, and eventual gassing. While Monteleone's sketches of that death camp will give many readers their own d‚j… vu about Sophie's Choice and Schindler's List, his standard ploy of introducing the CIA as the villain midway need not be feared: The story's main antagonist, a CIA hit man, is introduced right at the start. Like most of the other victims, Harford Nichols, the CIA assassin, has been experiencing blackouts and waking up in far-distant places, having assassinated people completely unknown to him. Once recovered by the Agency, Nichols is placed under the care of Dr. Isabella Mussina, who induces past-life recall through hypnosis. Nichols turns out to be harboring the soul of Hirsh Dukor, a blood-mad Jew who became the right-hand assistant of Dr. Mengele at Auschwitz. Once his recall has been brought forward full force, Nichols becomes Dukor, attacks Dr. Mussina, escapes to Manhattan and sets about plotting to rid the world of Jews, determined that the planet will enter the millennium with a one-world Nazi-styled dictatorship. Meanwhile, also in Manhattan, Dr. Michael Keating is dealing with several patients who have painful, troubling memories of past lives. Putting his files together with Dr. Mussina's, he decides that the best way to foil Dukor is to gather all the reincarnated victims together in New York, focusing their power against that of the lethal Dukor/Nichols. Then begin--whoosh!--the special effects. Swift, strongly meshed plot elements speed you through an ingenious gripper. -- Copyright ©1997, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Customer Reviews

3 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
2.3 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars Night of Broken Souls, Jan 8 2002
By Tabby (Madison) - See all my reviews
Night of Broken Souls

The book Night of Broken Souls by Thomas Monteleone is exciting and action-packed. This thrilling novel is about the psychiatrist, Michael Keating. A new patient comes bursting into Michael's office about to kill herself because of horrible nightmares she had been having of being a Jewish girl in a consentration camp during the Holocaust. While doing research on his patient he stumbles onto a horrifying phenomenon, people worldwide have been vivid nightmares and blackouts relating back to the Holocaust. Michael realizes that these victims are the reincarnated souls of innocent Holocaust victims. Later Keating discovers that along with the victims, Der Klein Engel, the man destine to murder these victims may has been reincarnated also. Michael and a few select colleagues must stop Der Klein Engle, or "the Little Angel" before the Holocaust happens all over again.
Any one who likes a little action in their life would love this book. I personally enjoyed this novel despite the slightly vulgar language and distasteful sexual content. I would rate this to be a nine on a scale from one to ten. For those who thrive on details and knowledge this book has very detailed scenes of the horrors of the Holocaust. For those thrill seekers out there, there is enough action to full fill anyone's thrive.

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2.0 out of 5 stars Interesting premise, poorly executed, Aug 26 2000
By A Customer
I grabbed this book off the shelf after reading The Resurrectionist (so-so) because I was in the mood for a quick, mindless read. The premise was interesting (past lives and souls reborn), but the characters came and went with little thought to plot. It is as if Mr. Monteleone asked all of his friends to come up with horror stories from WWII regarding Jews and included them. Now, of course, if all of these "good" people (read: innocent) who died in the Holocaust were reborn, it only makes sense that the evils ones would be as well. Oooohhh! Spooky!

It is never quite explained if part of the reborn soul is carried over life to life (an opera singer becomes a concert violinist becomes a pop star, etc). None of the "reborn" characters have any of their former life's qualities...so why should we be concerned about Hitler/Mengele/Der Klein Engel? So only the "bad" souls take the evil with them?

Also, I have to agree with the Rabbi's review below (excellent, by the way...please read it). There were quite a few "Jewish" anomalies...Mr. Monteleone's research must have focused on the Holocaust, not the Jewish faith (and culture - to some) in general. And I found his portrayal of the Rabbinical expert as stereotypical (and bordering on offensive), as we all know that Rabbis are either cold and distant (and tall and thin) or fat and jolly...a Jewish Santa Claus!

The romance between the male psychiatrist and his secretary (please) felt false and included only for some legitimate sex (too keep bored readers interested?). The female psychiatrist was cardboard as well.

The ending, which I won't describe, was full of (for me, at least) much eye rolling and "you MUST be kidding"'s. Very warm and fuzzy, with a requiset creepy epilogue.

In general, this book is not THAT bad if you don't read too much into it. Nice for a plane or long road trip. Not for those who want factual information.

Slightly worse than average...

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1.0 out of 5 stars Tedious, inauthentic treatment of very real phenomenon, Sep 7 1999
By A Customer
I picked this up hoping it would be a chilling but illuminating exploration of the Holocaust Reincarnation Phenomenon. It is not for me to say whether or not the experiences of people who believe in this are real but I do know that this author just has not done his homework on the Jewish Holocaust experience in my opinion. This book cried out that it was written by a non-Jew, which is not to say that a Gentile couldn't write well about this subject, just that this one didn't write well on the subject. I was further dismayed by the obvious resemblence of the Fictional Rabbi to the one Rabbi who in real life has spoken out about this issue. For some further and much more literate comments on that, please read his statements below. In conclusion, I feel you would do better to seek out non-fiction works on this subject until such time as a more skilled writer takes up the subject.
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