The Place at Whitton

The Place at Whitton (1964) is the first novel by Australian writer Thomas Keneally.[1]

The Place at Whitton
First edition
AuthorThomas Keneally
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish
GenreFiction
PublisherCassell, London
Publication date
1964
Media typePrint
Pages219pp
Preceded by 
Followed byThe Fear 

Story outline

The novel is set in a large seminary where, in eight weeks' time, 200 young men are to be ordained as Catholic priests. Then preparations are interrupted by the murders of one of the lay labourers and the scholarly rector.

Critical reception

A reviewer in Kirkus Reviews didn't find much of interest in the book: "The contrast provided by the presence of a Roman Catholic monastery allows the author a latitude in analytic comment he able to seize, but the hackneyed formula reduces his points to pretensions."[2]

In 2014 Knopf re-issued the novel to commemorate its fiftieth anniversary. Peter Pierce reviewed the release for The Sydney Morning Herald and noted: "In The Place at Whitton can also be discerned two enduring features of Keneally’s art. One is his use of melodrama – exaggerated language and gesture, the master theme of dispossession, whether of life, property, chastity, reputation. The other is the generous fault, cum structural problem, of trying to accommodate within one book several others that might have been...The beginning of his career as a novelist had awkward moments, but not tentative ones, as a prodigious imagination first exerted itself and the first of many stories was told."[3]

gollark: Those are deprecated.
gollark: Well, unless you draw ω energy at once.
gollark: The infinite energy tetrahedra do *not* run out.
gollark: Being "tired" is a problem for biological lifeforms which run on "glucose" and such, though.
gollark: Oh, I see. My cognition is offloaded to apioforms with infinite energy tetrahedra. So it works.

See also

References

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