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Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Review of Another Soul Saved by John Anthony Miller



Vienna, 1941

Monika Graf, the wife of a wealthy Austrian military commander, steals two Jewish girls from the Nazis—a crime often punishable by death. With soldiers in rapid pursuit, a homeless Jew named Janik, a mysterious man who lurks in the shadows, helps her escape.

Unable to have children of her own, she finds a new purpose in life—rescuing Jewish children from the horrendous Nazi regime. She asks the Swiss for help, trading military secrets she gleans from her husband for the lives of Jewish children. With Janik’s continued support, she also enlists Father Christoff, a priest at St. Stephen's Cathedral coping with unexpected emotions and doubting his commitment to God. Monika quickly forms bonds that can’t be broken, feelings exposed she never knew existed. 

Relentlessly pursued by Gestapo Captain Gustav Kramer, Monika combats continuing risk to her clandestine operation. When her husband, a rabid Nazi, returns from the battlefield severely wounded, she gets caught in a cage that she can’t crawl out of.

Wrought with danger, riddled with romance, Another Soul Saved shows humanity at both its best and worst in a classic struggle of good versus evil.

 ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Where Courage Defies Darkness and Humanity Refuses to Yield

I finished Another Soul Saved with the sense that I had witnessed something both intimate and immense—a story rooted in the quiet streets of Vienna, yet carrying the weight of an entire era’s moral reckoning. This is not simply a tale set during the Holocaust. It is a portrait of what happens when one ordinary life chooses to stand against extraordinary evil.

The novel moves through occupied Vienna with a steady, unflinching gaze. One moment we are in the shadow of St. Stephen’s Cathedral, where beauty and brutality exist side by side; the next, we are drawn into hidden rooms, narrow alleys and fragile sanctuaries where survival depends on silence, trust and impossible choices. The pacing never feels rushed, allowing each moment—whether filled with fear, compassion or quiet defiance—to settle with its full emotional weight.

At the heart of the story stands Monika Graf, whose journey unfolds with remarkable depth and restraint. She begins as a woman shaped by privilege and routine, yet there is an unmistakable undercurrent within her—a moral clarity that cannot remain dormant. Her transformation is not sudden or dramatic, but gradual and deeply human, shaped by what she witnesses and what she can no longer ignore. Alongside her, Janik Stern brings a quiet resilience forged through loss, while Father Christoff embodies the fragile line between faith and action in a world where both are constantly tested.

What gives the novel its power is the way it captures the atmosphere of a society unravelling from within. The cruelty is often casual, the danger ever-present, and the silence of bystanders as striking as the violence itself. Against this backdrop, acts of kindness feel both fragile and profound, as though each one carries a weight far greater than it should. The world of the novel feels suffocating at times, yet it is precisely within that darkness that moments of humanity shine most brightly.

Despite its historical scale, the story remains deeply personal. Relationships form and fracture under pressure, trust becomes both a necessity and a risk, and every decision carries consequences that cannot be undone. The emotional core never wavers, reminding us that behind every statistic of war are lives shaped by fear, hope and impossible choices.

The final chapters are quietly devastating. There is no grand spectacle, only a profound sense of dignity and loss, as one life comes to an end while countless others continue because of it. And yet, the novel does not leave us in despair. Instead, it offers a lasting sense of continuity—that courage, once chosen, does not disappear, but lives on in those who were saved.

Another Soul Saved is stark, powerful and deeply affecting. It feels less like a story being told and more like a truth being remembered—one that lingers long after the final page, reminding us how much can be changed by a single act of courage.


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John Anthony Miller writes all things historical—thrillers, mysteries, and romance. He sets his novels in exotic locations spanning all eras of space and time, with complex characters forced to face inner conflicts—fighting demons both real and imagined. He’s published twenty novels and ghostwritten several others, including Another Soul Saved. He lives in southern New Jersey.



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2 comments:

  1. Thank you so much for your ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ review of Another Soul Saved—we truly appreciate your support and kind words! ✨

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thank you so much for featuring Another Soul Saved, and for the wonderful review. I really appreciate it!

    ReplyDelete

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