Chief of Staff (novel) explained

Chief of Staff
Author:Thomas Keneally, as by William Coyle
Country:Australia
Language:English
Genre:Novel
Publisher:Chatto and Windus
Release Date:1991
Media Type:Print
Pages:426 pp.
Isbn:0701132582
Preceded By:Flying Hero Class
Followed By:Woman of the Inner Sea

Chief of Staff is a 1991 novel by the Australian author Thomas Keneally, writing under the pseudonym "William Coyle".[1]

Synopsis

During the Second World War, in Australia's battles against the Japanese, General Wraith's Chief of Staff, General Galton Sandforth, seduces a young Victorian woman, and, in order to ease his seduction, orders her husband be sent to Timor where he is sure to be captured or killed by the Japanese.

Critical reception

Writing in The Canberra Times reviewer Robert Maclin was not impressed with the work find it "a pretty awful wartime novel, a strange concoction of sloppy 'romance' with the internal machinations of MacArthur's top brass in the war against Japan...The result is that none of the major characters is even marginally sympathetic. And since we already know how the war turned out, this tends to detract more than some what from the book's appeal. No particular insights are given on the conduct of the war unless it's the emphasis on petty backbiting and jockeying for position among the staff officers which actuated so much of their 'strategic concerns'."[2]

Publishing history

After the novel's initial publication in UK by Chatto and Windus in 1991, it was reprinted by Pan Books in 1994.[3]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Chief of Staff by Thomas Keneally (C&W 1991). National Library of Australia. 21 June 2024.
  2. Web site: "This wartime novel misses the target" . The Canberra Times, 1 February 1992, p44. 21 June 2024.
  3. Web site: Austlit — Chief of Staff by William Coyle . Austlit. 21 June 2024.