The classic Scottish novel made into a movie starring Alec Guinness and John Mills. “[A] brilliant depiction of . . . the male military world” (The List).
Lt. Col. Jock Sinclair is a rough-talking, whisky-drinking soldier’s soldier, a hero of the desert campaign who rose to his position through the ranks. Col. Barrow, an officer graduate of Oxford and Sandhurst, had a wretched war in Japanese prison camps. But he has come to take command of the battalion he has long admired, the one that Jock Sinclair has served in since he was a boy. In the claustrophobic world of Campbell Barracks, a conflict is inevitable between the two men, and a tragedy unfolds with concentrated and ferocious power.
James Kennaway served in a Highland regiment himself, and his feeling for “tunes of glory,” for the glamour and brutality of army life, gives added authenticity and humor to this, his first and most famous novel. He died in a car crash at the tragically early age of forty.
“The old warrior who swaggers and swears his way through the pages here is a figure you are unlikely to forget . . . a story of considerable strength and the old man will easily command your attention and affection.” —Kirkus Reviews
James Kennaway (1928-68), was born in Auchterarder, Perthshire, where he came from a quiet middle-class background and went to public school at Trinity College, Glenalmond. When he was called to National Service in 1946 he joined the Queen's Own Cameron Highlanders and served with the Gordon Highlanders on the Rhine. Two years later he went to Trinity College, Oxford, where he took a degree in economics and politics before renewing his ambition as a writer and working for a publisher in London. Kennaway married his wife Susan in 1951, and something of their turbulent relationship and his own wild, charming, hard-drinking and intense personality can be found in The Kennaway Papers (1981), a book put together by Susan after his death.Tunes of Glory (1956) was Kennaway's first novel. It remains his best-known work, and the author himself wrote the screenplay for what was to become a hugely successful film in 1960. His next book, Household Ghosts (1961), was equally powerful. Set in Scotland as a tale of family tension and emotional strife, it was adapted for the stage and then filmed - again to the author's own screenplay - as Country Dance (1969). At the age of only 40, James Kennaway suffered a massive heart attack and died in a car crash just before Christmas in 1968. His last work, the novella Silence, was published posthumously in 1972.