Thomas Keneally (with one 'N', despite how Goodreads has it) released 'By the Line' in 1989. It's got a Boys Own verve that suggests a book by a younger author, which Keneally had been - this was originally published as 'The Fear' in 1965 before being repackaged after his Booker Prize success. The brawls, threats and action for the most part make it pacy to read. If you want a quick read with plenty of action, this should do the job
Trains seem to make a regular appearance in Keneally's books - this one was not as powerful as 'Schindler's Ark' but considerably better than I remember 'The People's Train'. It's main interest to me was that it offers a fresh take on WWII, seen from the Australian domestic perspective. Home soil may have largely been spared (Keneally's writing being my main source, so others may want to correct me!) but the sense of threat at the prospect of Japanese landings was well-made. Domestic strife is in abundance, in a book that reflects how geopolitical events overlay but don't necessarily drive intensely-felt emotional lives at a local level. Intra- and inter-familial conflicts take centre stage in 'By the Line', with the war consigned to the periphery (albeit with Danny's father fighting overseas, a munitions truck and war-linked poverty all helping to drive the plot).
My main criticism is that the characters felt overdrawn. The brutal father, strident fishwives, and chipper children had a comic book thickness of outline, which was finally let down a little by the predictable yet still overblown denouement. The boxing scene is typical: we get a hero and a villain, just too neatly set in counterpoint to the revolutionary failings of After Penelope Fitzgerald, the zest of Keneally's tale about missing weapons and misplaced loyalties was refreshing. I would read it again in the right mood.