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Father Koesler #24

The Gathering

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Way back in the 1940s, they had all been young together. Inseparable pals Mike and Manny, both preparing for the priesthood . . . Mike’s beautiful twin sister, Rose, and her best friend Alice, sharing a dream of becoming nuns . . . shy altar boy Stanley and everybody’s good friend, Bob Koesler, also headed for the priesthood. Six Detroit adolescents moving step by measured step into the bosom of the church. Or so they believed.

Now, more than fifty years later, one of the six has died a sudden, violent death, and Father Bob Koesler—these days a retired parish priest—is sadly suspicious that someone in this tiny band of lifelong friends may be responsible. But who and why? Before long, Koesler has reason to believe he knows the shocking answer. . . .

304 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published January 1, 2002

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About the author

William X. Kienzle

28 books29 followers
William X. Kienzle was born in Detroit, Michigan. He was ordained to the priesthood in 1954 and spent twenty years as a Roman Catholic parish priest. Kienzle left the priesthood in 1974 because of his disagreement with its refusal to remarry divorcees. He became an editor of MPLS Magazine in Minneapolis, later moving to Texas where he was director of the Center for Contemplative Studies at the University of Dallas.

He was married to Javan Herman Andrews, a journalist from the Detroit Free Press, from 1974 until his sudden death from a heart attack on December 28, 2001.

Kienzle was the author of twenty-four crime fiction/mystery novels featuring Father Robert Koesler, a Catholic priest who doubles as a detective. One of his best known novels is his first, The Rosary Murders (1978), which was made into a 1987 movie starring Donald Sutherland as Father Koesler. Kienzle's books are set mostly in Detroit, Michigan.

His biography, Judged by Love, by Javan Kienzle, was published in 2003.

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5 stars
18 (21%)
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34 (40%)
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20 (24%)
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Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews
Profile Image for Joy.
1,409 reviews23 followers
January 3, 2020
We are introduced to a group of tight friends led by Father Koesler. The group was established when they were all quite young, but we knew nothing about them until this 24th book. THE GATHERING tells us in the beginning that one of the Six has died, but not who or how. The book tells the history of the Six, and it isn’t until the very end that we know what death we are talking about.

Author Kienzle, former priest, digs deeply into the human toll taken by some of the rules of the Catholic church, rules that drove him away from the priesthood. I sympathize but found the book depressing.
Profile Image for Hapzydeco.
1,591 reviews14 followers
June 4, 2014
In this treatise of the Catholic Church, William X. Kienzle seems to employ Father Bob Koesler’s backstory to illustrate Kienzle’s decision to leave the priesthood.
Profile Image for Caleigh O'Shea.
Author 1 book4 followers
September 27, 2017
Not as good as his other books. This one is more introspective rather than the customary murder mystery.
Profile Image for Phil.
467 reviews
January 20, 2018
A world I knew nothing about. Interesting, and well developed characters.
Profile Image for Midu Hadi.
Author 3 books180 followers
October 3, 2025
Quick-look at the Book
Koesler's friends from boyhood had a ticking bomb in the group and never even knew it. Each of them had their reasons to become priests or nuns. But one of them had so much more to lose.

Thoughts on this Book
This one was less than okayish! After having grown old with Koesler, I didn't want to connect with completely new characters from his teenage years. I didn't know them. Why'd I care about what happened to them? A snoozefest, sadly.

Thoughts on this Series
This is a nice enough cozy mystery series. The central character is Father Koesler who by no actions of his own--mostly--keeps tripping over murdered people and getting roped into police investigations.

While the characterization and motivation behind each suspect are well-described, there can be often too many POVs or too many details that detract from the action.

That said, the author repeatedly hits you over the head with the same details about priesthood and religion. If you can bear with that, and are okay with the protagonist arriving at the euphoria! moment while in the bathtub or car or...you get what I mean...read on.

My advice? Space em out. Or, they start to become a blob (Lily & Marshal style).

Also published on WP

Review of Book 23 here
Profile Image for Dwayne Wojtowicz.
225 reviews5 followers
March 11, 2019
After reading "The Gathering," by William X. Kienzle, I felt that I was ready for the priesthood and literally removed all of his books from my bookshelves and my to-read list.

I guess that I am a sucker for punishment, but not any longer. Kienzle has definitely lost me as a reader. Again, "The Gathering" was more of a lecture on how the Catholic Church works, its rules and regulations, and how I can circumvent the necessity of having a well-founded family and relationship in the Catholic Church to become a priest.

I kept on asking myself, "Where's the mystery? Where's the murder?" Apparently there wasn't.

Definitely a "do not read" book. I cannot and will not ever recommend a Kienzle book.
5,305 reviews62 followers
October 8, 2015
#24 in the Father Koesler series. Series finale after the death of author Kienzle on 12/28/2001.

Father Koesler mysteries - an atypical final entry. The book traces 6 young people (including Bob Koesler) from High school through the seminary / convent. The gathering takes place when they are in their 70s and one of their number has been found dead.
Profile Image for Dolores.
90 reviews1 follower
August 10, 2011
It's been ages since I read a Father Koesler book! This is such a good read that I almost missed my bus stop. I guess I have to read it a home so I don't have to stop!

No so much a mystery... but a really good book none-the-less!
Profile Image for Fredrick Danysh.
6,844 reviews196 followers
December 12, 2014
Six Detroit youth have plans for their futures. Fifty years later one of the group meets a violent death and retired priest Father Bob Koesler suspects that one of his four remaining friends is responsible. Soon he comes up with some shocking truths.
Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews

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