Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Brookner, Anita (Vol. 134) - Anne Roiphe (review date 16-30 December 1996)


Brookner, Anita (Vol. 134) - Anne Roiphe (review date 16-30 December 1996)

Anne Roiphe (review date 16-30 December 1996)

SOURCE: “Lifelong Loneliness,” in New Leader, December 16-30, 1996, pp. 28-9.

[In the following review, Roiphe admires Altered States for its ability to harken back to and emulate “the days when a novel could transport you out of yourself.”]

Anita Brookner's 16th novel is not a surprise. Winner of the Booker Prize for Hotel du Lac, she is a master of the repressed, the inhibited, the left out, the trapped-in-a-social-web. She is also a superb critic of the stiff upper lip, the duty done, form instead of substance, an opportunity missed, and the shadowy prison-like life that appears to be peculiarly English, drab, dull, yet mutely desperate.

This time Brookner's hero or antihero is a man, Alan Sherwood, a solicitor following in the footsteps of his father and grandfather. He tells us about the one great irrational passion of his life and the tragedy it led to in...

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