Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Brookner, Anita (Vol. 134) - Ann Fisher-Wirth (essay date Spring 1995)


Brookner, Anita (Vol. 134) - Ann Fisher-Wirth (essay date Spring 1995)

Ann Fisher-Wirth (essay date Spring 1995)

SOURCE: “Hunger Art: The Novels of Anita Brookner,” in Twentieth Century Literature, Vol. 41, No. 1, Spring, 1995, pp. 1-15.

[In the following essay, Fisher-Wirth examines the recurring motifs of loss, sexual longing, parental deprivation, and self-denial among female characters in Brookner's novels.]

I read Anita Brookner with chagrin and fascination. I have never before been addicted to a writer with whose values and vision I so consciously disagree. Every time a new Brookner novel is published, I buy it the day it arrives—in hard cover, no less. My life remains on hold until the new novel is finished. Yet when I close the book, more often than not I am angry. How can she offer that, I ask myself again and again, as an image of life, of womanhood?

One of the sources of my frustration is Brookner's well-known belief that nice girls finish last—that, as Edith Hope says in...

[The entire page is 6084 words long]

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