Introduction by Chris Wallace-Crabbe
At the outbreak of World War I, Dominic Langton leaves his wife on a remote sheep farm in New South Wales to enlist in the British Army. What he experiences in the trenches changes him forever; his return home sees him cast off his past and find his own integrity. He has seen the true nature of war—the senseless waste of life, the millions of young men condemned to pointless slaughter—and has emerged a wiser, but troubled, man.
When Blackbirds Sing is a masterful recreation of the vanished world of 1914, and a moving and powerful testament to the devastation of war. In this final instalment of Martin Boyd’s celebrated Langton Quartet, Boyd confirms his reputation as one of the most outstanding novelists Australia has ever produced.
‘The sophistication of this novel meshes so perfectly with the heartfelt story that it tells. When Blackbirds Sing well deserves its place on my shelves.’