Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Brookner, Anita (Vol. 134) - Frank Kermode (review date 19 June 1993)


Brookner, Anita (Vol. 134) - Frank Kermode (review date 19 June 1993)

Frank Kermode (review date 19 June 1993)

SOURCE: “Small but Perfectly Formed,” in Spectator, June 19, 1993, pp. 29-30.

[In the following review, Kermode offers praise for Brookner's novel A Family Romance.]

Priority in the use of this title could be claimed by Richard Wollheim, who, in 1969, gave it to an ingenious novel, which also made stronger reference than this one to the original sense of the term. However, Anita Brookner [in A Family Romance] does establish a Freudian association by situating some of her characters in Maresfield Gardens; they have Viennese connections and there is significant mention of an address in the Berggasse. Not for the first time she offers us samples of middle-European bourgeois life comfortably transported to London. But the heroine and her family, more English in their manners, live in Prince of Wales Drive, a middle-class bastion regarded as inaccessibly far to the south, and lacking...

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