Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Arundel, Honor - Eleanore Braun Luckey
Arundel, Honor - Eleanore Braun Luckey
ELEANORE BRAUN LUCKEY
In A Family Failing, Arundel has portrayed through amazingly real-life conversations the changing relationships, over a period of time, of husband and wife, mother and daughter, father and daughter, mother and son, father and son, sister and brother. Each person is both an individual and a family member with his own peculiar ties to every other member. The basic concept that one's feeling about others and one's behavior toward them is determined by how one feels about oneself is beautifully demonstrated in the father's rising resentment of his son as his own self-esteem falls. The importance of one's sense of identity as based in one's profession is emphasized by the crumbling of the stable, happy husband-wife relationship when father loses his job and mother succeeds at hers. The most vivid and empathically portrayed relationship is that between the daughter, who is the first-person storyteller, and her father.
The story is...
[The entire page is 275 words long]
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- Introduction
- Robert Bell
- Polly Goodwin
- S. L. Blanford
- Linda Crowe
- Zena Sutherland
- Mrs. J. M. Murphy
- Margery Fisher
- Mrs. J. Aldridge
- Margery Fisher
- Julia G. Russell
- Judith Aldridge
- John W. Conner
- Nicholas Tucker
- John W. Conner
- Margery Fisher
- Celia Boyd
- Judith Aldridge
- Vivienne Furlong
- J. Russell
- John Rowe Townsend
- Eleanore Braun Luckey
- Copyright
