Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Brookner, Anita (Vol. 134) - Frederick Busch (review date 22 January 1995)


Brookner, Anita (Vol. 134) - Frederick Busch (review date 22 January 1995)

Frederick Busch (review date 22 January 1995)

SOURCE: “Waiting Game,” in Los Angeles Times Book Review, January 22, 1995, pp. 3, 13.

[In the following review, Busch offers tempered acclaim for A Private View, commending Brookner's prose and intelligence though finding the novel predictable.]

Anita Brookner, whose Hotel Du Lac was awarded England's Booker Prize, is justly praised for her restraint and insight, and once more she demonstrates them in her 14th book, which begins in the mind of a man, George Bland, whom we have met before. Sensitive, depressed, wealthy, in flight from his nightmares and in search of something about which to dream, he pitches up in Europe. He is 65, and his dearest friend, Michael Putnam, not his lover but his soul's truest mate, has died. Brookner writes that in Nice, he “had sought a restorative, conventional enough.”

As an admirer of her work, I cannot imagine the author...

[The entire page is 1406 words long]

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