Midnight Voices

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The sudden, tragic death of her husband leaves Caroline Evans alone in New York City to raise her children with little money and even less hope. When she meets and marries handsome, successful Anthony Fleming, the charismatic man of her dreams, she believes her life is destined for happiness. She and her children move into her new husband’s spacious apartment in the legendary Rockwell on Central Park West. Despite her son’s instinctive misgivings about the building and its residents, Caroline dismisses the odd behavior of her neighbors as pleasant eccentricities. But after her daughter begins to experience horrifying nightmares and a startling secret emerges, Caroline realizes that the magnificence of her new home masks a secret of unimaginable horror. . . .

384 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published January 1,2002

About the author

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John Saul grew up in Whittier California where he graduated from Whittier High School in 1959. He attended several colleges—Antioch, in Ohio, Cerritos, in Norwalk, California, Montana State University and San Francisco State College, variously majoring in anthropology, liberal arts, and theater, but never obtaining a degree.
After leaving college, he decided the best thing for a college dropout to do was become a writer, and spent the next fifteen years working in various jobs while attempting to write a book someone would want to publish. Should anyone ever want to write a novel concerning the car-rental industry or the travails of temporary typists, John can provide excellent background material.

Those years garnered him a nice collection of unpublished manuscripts, but not a lot of money. Eventually he found an agent in New York, who spent several years sending his manuscripts around, and trying to make the rejection slips sound hopeful. Then, in 1976, one of his manuscripts reached Dell, who didn't want to buy it, but asked if he'd be interested in writing a psychological thriller. He put together an outline, and crossed his fingers.

At that point, things started getting bizarre. His agent decided the outline had all the makings of a best-seller, and so did Dell. Gambling on a first novel by an unknown author, they backed the book with television advertising (one of the first times a paperback original was promoted on television) and the gamble paid off. Within a month Suffer the Children appeared on all the best-seller lists in the country and made the #1 spot in Canada. Subsequently all 32 of his books, have made all the best-seller lists and have been published world wide. Though many of his books were published by Bantam/Doubleday/Dell his last fourteen books have been published by Ballantine/Fawcett/Columbine.

In addition to his work as novelist, John is also interested in the theater. He has acted, and as a playwright has had several one-act plays produced in Los Angeles and Seattle, and two optioned in New York. One of his novels was produced by Gerber Productions Company and M.G.M. as a C.B.S. movie and currently one of his novels is in development.

John served on the Expansion Arts Panel of the National Endowment for the Arts. He is actively involved with the development of other writers, and is a lecturer at the Pacific Northwest Writers Conference and the Maui Writers Conference and received the Life Time Achievement Award from the Northwest Writers Conference. John is also a trustee and Vice President of The Chester Woodruff Foundation (New York), a philanthropic organization.

John lives part-time in the Pacific Northwest, both in Seattle and in the San Juan Islands. He also maintains a residence on the Big Island of Hawaii. He currently enjoys motor homing, travel and golf. He is an avid reader, bridge player, golfer and loves to cook.

Community Reviews

Rating(3.9 / 5.0, 100 votes)
5 stars
30(30%)
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100 reviews All reviews
April 17,2025
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Having read most of John Saul's books, I would rank Midnight Voices very near the bottom of the list. It's a fairly predictable storyline, but it does mark a slight departure from Saul's typical portrayal of some adolescent facing unknown horrors pretty much on his/her own. That's not to say that this novel doesn't have adolescents in danger because it most certainly does, but I think Saul does a decent job of shifting perspective among several characters this time around. When all is said and done, though, Midnight Voices just isn't all that scary or even engaging. While several of the characters experience dread and fear at the mere sight of the story's prominent location - the old Rockwell apartment building in New York City - the building really doesn't seem to convey a particularly strong atmosphere to the reader. There is nothing evil about the place - the only evil comes in the form of the bulding's occupants.

The novel gets off to a great start, with one poor unfortunate husband and father proving that slightly less than perfect paranoia is far less than perfect awareness. He leaves behind a wife and two children who must now try to adjust to different kind of life - one without a nice home and private schools. Enter Anthony Fleming, who quickly sweeps Caroline off her feet. Sure, the kids don't like moving in to the spooky old Rockwell building, but Caroline finds a new sense of peace and happiness in the marriage. Unfortunately, the kids don't adjust to their new life. Their neighbors in the Rockwell are weird, even for old people, and the only other teenager there is mysteriously sick all of the time. Night time is the worst, as both children are increasingly frightened by the sound of whispering voices inside their rooms. The Rockwell houses a deep, dark secret that ultimately puts the very lives of Caroline and her children at risk - but will Caroline recognize the danger in time to save them?

There are two main problems with Midnight Voices. One, the book may have a creepy moment or two but overall the scare factor just isn't there. More importantly, I found the plot of the novel to be surprisingly weak - I would say that the explanation for the goings on at the Rockwell falls well short of Saul's well-established standards. I also just never came to care a great deal about any of the characters in the story, especially poor dumb Caroline. The old Saul magic just wasn't there this time around.
April 17,2025
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I truly got lost in this book. John Saul wrote another master piece. This book gave me chills. Voices in the walls, stealing the youth of children so a group of immortals can stay young. This was truly a terrifying book.
April 17,2025
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Tremendo, aunque recuerda a Rosemary's Baby en algunos detalles (la historia no tiene nada que ver).
April 17,2025
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This is the first John Saul I have read and it definitely won't be the last. Mr. Saul is an incredible storyteller. His plot is solid as well as descriptions and character development.

As far as the story goes, I was intrigued. It was dark and foreboding but with little of the modern gore that seems to define horror these days. This is a type of story that seeps into your subconscious to make your hairs stand up without you really understanding why.
April 17,2025
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I read somewhere that John Saul was one of the best horror writers in line after Stephen King and Dean Koontz. So I decided to give him a try. But even before (yeah! 'but even before' - you will know what I mean if you read this book) I was half way through it, I realized I was doing a mistake. Though the basic idea of dead people feeding on children to prolong their life (maybe existence - I don't call it a life) is kind of interesting, the way the story moved was way too pathetic. I was waiting for the redemption to happen at some point of time and it did. Yes; it did in the epilogue. I somehow felt that the epilogue would have made a good prologue for a better story. Maybe that is the spark that inspired the author in the first place; But the book is not worth the wait!

The characters never seemed real and the narration was so made up, I really felt a ninth grade kid could write an essay better than he (yeah! 'better than he' - you will know what I mean if you read this book :P). There was absolutely no style to the writing. The book was filled with "but even", "yet even", "even though" and questions. (who was tony?, "a hotel? why would she be in a hotel? why wasn't she at home?", "how long since the noise had stopped?") Come on! Tell me the story, dude!

"In many places I thought this was a dream. I was in a dream. I am not reading this. It cannot be. I just came back from office and I went to bed and I slept immediately. I can't be reading this. This cannot be a book that was published by a leading publisher. How could I be reading this?" This is how the whole the narration was!!

I wanted to warn people who are planning to try this piece of very poorly executed horror (where is my horror?) - He is no where near SK or DK. I am wondering how this could be a bestseller with an average >3.5 in goodreads. I was cheated by the other reviews. Don't get yourself cheated.
April 17,2025
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Brilliant

Can't beat a Guid John Saul book and like all his others it doesn't disappoint. Modern or should I say ancient vampires, maybe. Intriguing story. Loved every minute of it.
April 17,2025
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It could be a four star book, it's competent but with problems.
First off the book wants it to be a mystery what's happening for a long time, it pretends it's a mystery, but everybody should have been able to totally figure out what's happening early. The second issue is the ending, it's drawn out for a long time, it feels like the author was trying to make a word count and was just stretching it. In the middle of the frenzied finale the book suddenly needs to describe at length every little movement.
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