When the Belzec concentration camp was liberated in 1945, no one could explain how a group of Jewish captives had not only survived but thrived, appearing better fed than their Nazi captors. Thirty-five years later in New York, the youths responsible for the murder of a rabbi's son are found hideous
The Tribe
โ Scribed by Wood, Bari
- Publisher
- Centipede Press
- Year
- 1981
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 168 KB
- Category
- Fiction
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Highly acclaimed when first published in 1981, The Tribe follows a group of Jewish people who not only survive the concentration camps, but thrive. Their secret follows them to modern-day Brooklyn, where they continue their relationship and keep their deadly cabal until one day a new threat arrives. This fine novel draws heavily on Jewish mythology and folklore.
Review
WHAT THE EXORCIST WAS TO CATHOLICISM THE TRIBE IS TO JUDAISM. THIS TERRIFYING TALE OF CABALISTIC MYSTICISM AND MAGIC WILL HOLD YOU SHIVERINGLY SPELLBOUND.
The writing is clear and compelling, the dialogue is dramatic, the characters are captivating and the plot is suspenseful. What is the mysterious link between the Belzec concentration camp Jewish captives miraculously found alive and well-fed in their powdery gray clay coated barracks and the five teenagers who, 35 years later, after murdering a Rabbis son, are found hideously murdered in a powdery gray clay-coated clubhouse? The author will have you furiously flipping pages to find the fascinating and frightening answer....
This story has all the excitement of a murder mystery and all of the terror of a tale of horror. The author, whose previous bestsellers include The Killing Gift and Twins, has written another successful supernatural sagaand secured her place among suspense storytellers.
Los Angeles Herald Examiner
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When the Belzec concentration camp was liberated in 1945, no one could explain how a group of Jewish captives had not only survived but thrived, appearing better fed than their Nazi captors. Thirty-five years later in New York, the youths responsible for the murder of a rabbi's son are found hideous
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