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Eminence

The Father Koesler Mysteries: Book 11

#11 in series

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"Another engrossing installment is a superlative series featuring an intriguing blend of crime and religion." —Booklist

"The Rosary Murders quickly established Father Koesler as among the most likable and authentic of all recent sleuths and gave his wise and compassionate creator a midlife career and a new pulpit. Since then, few mystery series have been more cozy and persuasive, and Eminence finds Kienzle at the peak of his form." —Chicago Tribune

When a priest and four religious brothers establish the Congregation of St. Stephen, a quasi-monastery in an abandoned bank building in downtown Detroit, their flock swells, along with their bank account. The first big depositor is Mrs. Anne Whitehead, wife of philanthropist and philanderer Emery Whitehead. After Father Robert—the monastery's leader—blesses her with a holy relic, her sight is restored after years of blindness.

Word of the so-called miracle spreads quickly and Alice Balcom—the live-in lover of Detroit Homicide's most experienced detective, Alonzo "Zoo" Tully—is first in line to receive the curative powers of the new monastic order. Pat Lennon, the highly esteemed journalist from the Detroit News, whose relationship with rival reporter Joe Cox at the Free Press has been eagerly followed by Kienzle fans, is sent to investigate the legitimacy of these faith healers.

And representing the interests of Detroit's Catholic hierarchy is mystery fans' favorite priest, Father Robert Koesler, whose astute observations of human nature eventually lead him to uncover the truth. And once again, Koesler can't be hoodwinked. His intuitive thinking leads him to uncover the truth. His intuitive thinking tells him that all is not what it appears to be. He takes his readers behind the makeshift altar at St. Stephen's into the monk's spartan living quarters, along the way interjecting his insights into monasticism and the inner sanctums of the Catholic Church.

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  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 1, 1989
      Burnishing the reputation he has earned with The Rosary Murders , Kienzle again sets series hero Father Koesler among criminals in Detroit. The priest visits a dark, cheerless cloister where four monks draw the media and swarms of citizens when one of the friars reputedly works a miraculous cure. Although skeptical, homicide detective ``Zoo'' Tully takes his ailing lover to the cloister and the monk heals her instantly. There is no perceived connection between the murder of an old bum, a case assigned to Tully, nor to the attempted murder of Koesler's friend, reporter Pat Lennon, as she writes about the secretive community. But Koesler, versed in Catholic rituals and wise to the ways of con artists, performs wonders of his own. Proving that faith does move mountains, the author entertains and educates.

    • Library Journal

      April 1, 1989
      The recent sudden notoriety of Brother Robert's miraculous "cures" in Detroit brings the small, newly founded Congregation of St. Stephen under scrutiny by press, police, and church fathers. The interests of all three factions merge when someone tries to murder Patricia Lennon, star reporter for the Detroit News . Kienzle renders a slick presentation, pumped up with a large, varied cast and the standard background filler. However, the unsubtle prose and presence of multiple protagonists lends an uneven quality to the whole. Father Koesler's mere ancillary involvement may also disappoint series fans ( The Rosary Murders, Deathbed, etc.). Purchase where demand merits.-- REK

      Copyright 1989 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 31, 1990
      ``Burnishing the reputation he has earned with The Rosary Murders , Kienzle again sets series hero Father Koeslerstet spelling among criminals in Detroit,'' remarked PW . ``Proving that faith does move mountains, the author entertains and educates.''

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  • English

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