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The Office of Innocence [Audiobook] [Audio Cassette]

Thomas Keneally , Steven Pacey
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
Price: £48.12 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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Product details

  • Audio Cassette
  • Publisher: Chivers Audio Books (13 May 2003)
  • ISBN-10: 0754083063
  • ISBN-13: 978-0754083061
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 5,583,051 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Thomas Keneally
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Review

"- 'Magnificent... A literary tour de force' - James Urquhart, Independent on Sunday - 'A tremendous work, full of scholarship, adventure, drama and compassion' - Rachel Cusk, Daily Telegraph - 'A work of towering authority: large in scope; rich in detail; overflowing with ripe humanity...more than an engrossing novel: it is a stirring one.' - David Robson, Sunday Telegraph - 'Hugely compelling... vivid, immediate, heartfelt' - Julie Wheelwright, Scotland on Sunday - 'A rich feast served up with great skill and passion by a master storyteller.' - Peter Cunningham, Irish Times - 'Should be read for decades to come' - Ruth Scurr, The Times --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Toby Clements, Daily Telegraph

"This is a beautifully plotted parable, as involving as any thriller..." --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful
Innocence assayed 15 Aug 2005
By Stephen A. Haines HALL OF FAME TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
Clad equally in priestly vestments and an aura of innocence, Frank Darragh suddenly finds the world crowding his faith. Two great bastions of Empire have succumbed to Japanese invasions, and Frank's Sydney stands imperiled alone. As the remaining outpost of Empire, Sydney has become a military crossroads and, if the Japanese haven't invaded, the Yanks have. They are ubiquitous - on the streets, in pubs, and taking up with Sydney women. One of these women, a "POW widow" encounters Frank, setting off a disturbing chain of events.

War is busy time for young men - committment, training, combat. When that young man happens to be a priest, further emotional conflicts needing resolution arise. Social pressures become intense, with people seeking solace wherever it can be found. Frank's confessional has a queue. He's even more popular than the parish priest - "You'll have to put in for overtime!", Fr. Carolan tells him. There's more involved than Frank's light penances. He feels the need to reach out and bring consolation instead of waiting to be asked. That leads him to cross parish boundaries in support of an AWOL soldier. Crossing that line adds further complexity as Frank's confronted with race issues. Between the temptation of a woman, the startling revelation of child abuse, and a murder, Frank leads a hectic existence.

In one sense, Keneally's plot is relatively transparent. His characters follow predictable paths once they're introduced. Although not a "mystery" writer, he provides a murder and the perpetrator can be only one character. With Keneally, this is hardly a shortcoming. His strength is character development, and whatever your opinion of Frank Darragh, Keneally has portrayed him with his usual finesse. As with all Keneally fiction, this book ends with the resolution of a moral dilemma. The impact of that issue has little to do with the plot - it's wholly in the hands of the protagonist. Keneally's command of language and his ability to reveal inner feelings is unmatched and well demonstrated here. Pick up the book and follow the response of a man's discovery of the world. ... [stephen a. haines - Ottawa, Canada]

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
Too Much Innocence? 9 Sep 2009
By Eileen Shaw TOP 500 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
Father Frank Darragh is an innocent and to the more worldly, and in many ways more wise, Monsignor Carolan, he is something of a trial. Father Frank takes his ministry much more seriously than is usual, and with an openness that is sometimes misconstrued.

We are in Northern coastal Australia in a town close to the barracks of the American and Australian forces who are currently fighting World War II in the Pacific Ocean. Father Frank meets a number of Catholic adherents, including a black soldier caught consorting with white women. Father Frank worries that this man will not survive incarceration, since the racism with which he is regarded seems to promise harsh treatment. Pursuing his own agenda, according to the God who directs him, Father Frank also meets a young Australian woman with a son, whose husband has been captured by the Japanese. Her faith has been tested and Father Frank, recognising that he finds this woman attractive, nevertheless contends with her in conversation and in letters for her immortal soul, despite the advice of Monsignor Carolan to avoid contact with her. At the same time, he comes across the charismatic figure of Fratelli, a Sergeant MP in the American forces stationed in the town.

Each of these characters and a few others germane to the story that will unravel, is introduced authoritatively, as one would expect of the writer who created Schindler's Ark. But Keneally has an impressive repertoire of writing, having been shortlisted for the Booker prize four times. His writing style is deceptively plain, which makes the expressive emotional shock which builds within the events of Father Frank's ministry all the more telling.

Not having a religious bone in my body, I was astonished to find myself greatly moved and provoked by the strength of my attention to the characters of this powerful book. It reminded me a little of the works of Graham Greene, in its outlook of sceptical attachment to the Roman Catholic world.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com:  9 reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
Naiveté In Action 6 July 2003
By Robert Derenthal - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
Father Frank Darragh is a recent, 1941 product of an Australian Catholic seminary, and is now a curate at a city parish. Author Keneally, a former seminarian himself, totally understands the mind of the young, devout parish priest. Father Darragh has assimilated all of the counseling techniques taught at the seminary, and now tries them out in real life. Alas he has no real understanding of human psychology. When people are mired in the complex, often sordid, problems of life our good priest offers them pious platitudes that provide no help.

One thing that the seminary did not prepare him for was the sexual stirrings that begin to intrude when he tries to provide some of his canned counseling to an attractive young mother whose husband is a Japanese prisoner of war. After she rejects his advice, Father Darragh, tries to find ways to see her again, telling himself that he just wants to help her resolve her problems. I guess they didn't teach much about psychological (or physical) denial in the seminary.

He does meet with her again, and the visit is quite innocuous, but shortly thereafter the young woman is murdered. Our hero continues to be peripherally involved in the case, which results in increased suspicion by the police, and increased annoyance by his pastor. We follow the stumblings of Father Frank as he sniffs along the murder trail, and gets involved in some other difficulties which even get him beaten up by some tough guys.

Keneally is a fine writer, having a great sense of style and wit. I found this to be a comfortable, entertaining tale that was especially appealing to me as I also spent some time in the seminary a century or so ago. Readers who are unfamiliar with Catholic liturgy will be either intrigued by the book's frequent description of it, or perhaps turned off by it. My only nit is that I wasn't tremendously pleased with the story's ending, but, that is probably just my problem. This is a good, literate read, and I have no reservations in recommending it.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
The perils of idealism 23 Mar 2007
By D. Martz - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
Had I known how little space this novel would give to evoking the ambience of wartime Australia, I wouldn't have bought it -- but if I hadn't, I would have missed a haunting story. Keneally is a Booker Prize-winner who trained for the Catholic priesthood. So this account of a young priest's struggle to apply the pure theory of his creed to world in which in his flock's ordinary imperfections have become compounded by the societal stresses of a threatened Japanese invasion has the constant ring of authenticity. As a Protestant, I don't share lots of Father Darragh's beliefs, but Keneally paints him so vividly and sympathetically that his trials become a story of the timeless human struggle to reconcile "what is" with "what should be" that transcends matters of doctrine.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Innocence assayed 2 Mar 2003
By Stephen A. Haines - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Clad equally in priestly vestments and an aura of innocence, Frank Darragh suddenly finds the world crowding his faith. Two great bastions of Empire have succumbed to Japanese invasions, and Frank's Sydney stands imperiled alone. As the remaining outpost of Empire, Sydney has become a military crossroads and, if the Japanese haven't invaded, the Yanks have. They are ubiquitous - on the streets, in pubs, and taking up with Sydney women. One of these women, a "POW widow" encounters Frank, setting off a disturbing chain of events.

War is busy time for young men - committment, training, combat. When that young man happens to be a priest, further emotional conflicts needing resolution arise. Social pressures become intense, with people seeking solace wherever it can be found. Frank's confessional has a queue. He's even more popular than the parish priest - "You'll have to put in for overtime!", Fr. Carolan tells him. There's more involved than Frank's light penances. He feels the need to reach out and bring consolation instead of waiting to be asked. That leads him to cross parish boundaries in support of an AWOL soldier. Crossing that line adds further complexity as Frank's confronted with race issues. Between the temptation of a woman, the startling revelation of child abuse, and a murder, Frank leads a hectic existence.

In one sense, Keneally's plot is relatively transparent. His characters follow predictable paths once they're introduced. Although not a "mystery" writer, there's a murder and the "perp" can be only one character. With Keneally, this is hardly a shortcoming. His strength is character development, and whatever your opinion of Frank Darragh, Keneally has portrayed him with his usual finesse. As with all Keneally fiction, this book ends with the resolution of a moral dilemma. The impact of that issue has little to do with the plot - it's wholly in the hands of the protagonist. Keneally's command of language and his ability to reveal inner feelings is unmatched and well demonstrated here. Pick up the book and follow the response of a man's discovery of the world.

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