Industry Reviews
'Superbly exciting... unmissable, unforgettable.' - Kate Saunders, The Times
'A tour de force of storytelling that is both epic and intimate, experimental and traditional.' - James Kidd, Books of the Year, Independent on Sunday
'Along with a Tolstoyan ability to describe the horrors of battle, this amazing book also has an extraordinary intimacy... an altogether towering achievement.' - AN Wilson, Readers Digest
'May be the best novel of his career: a book that aims for, and achieves, real grandeur.' - James Walton, Books of the Year, Spectator
'Triumphant: this epic saga is one of the best things he has written.' - Michael Prodger, Financial Times
'Over and over again, a brief but brilliant phrase turns a statistic into a real person and wrings compassion from you.' - Jake Kerridge, Sunday Express
'Superbly involving.' - Catherine Taylor, Books of the Year, Sunday Telegraph
'No Australian author has written more eloquently or extensively of war than Tom Keneally... Now, at last and triumphantly, there is a full-scale Keneally novel of the Great War... All of it is handled by Keneally with calm mastery. If epic is no longer a literary category that fits this world, The Daughters of Mars nonetheless has a tragic and humane span that few recent novels have attempted, let alone equalled.' - Canberra Times
'Keneally, for decades one of Australia's most prominent and exuberant storytellers, has a passion for history that is infectious and irresistible. His new novel tackles - on an epic scale - the role of Australian nurses in World War I... Keneally's fascination with the roles of ordinary people like these young women play in momentous events gives The Daughters of Mars its terrific energy and freshness.' - Adelaide Advertiser
'The huge talents of Thomas Keneally are everywhere on display.' - The Guardian
'The translation into fiction of all that he uncovered is one of this novel's finest achievements. You sense a storymaker with his manuscript pegged out and in play, dotting in tiny facts, intricate details: innovations in medical practice and anaesthetics, even the different fashions worn by Australia's different state nurses. Here, he drops in the artistic philosophy of light; there, the surreality of travel to famous places; and then, the death of Joan of Arc, in five perfect paragraphs. The breadth and accretion of all this is dazzling, matched - and sometimes superseded - by the perfection of the intimate gestures and internal moments through which he vivifies his young women. What grief looks like as it works across somebody's lips; how human touch feels to someone more used to swabbing and stitching.' - The Australian
'The skill of Tom Keneally is that he writes with a large scope on matters from the Irish diaspora to convict life in Australia, the Holocaust and now World War I, but his stories are engagingly intimate.' - The Daily Telegraph