Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Brookner, Anita (Vol. 134) - Jacqueline Carey (review date 18 January 1998)


Brookner, Anita (Vol. 134) - Jacqueline Carey (review date 18 January 1998)

Jacqueline Carey (review date 18 January 1998)

SOURCE: “Bleak House,” in New York Times Book Review, January 18, 1998, p. 10.

[In the following review, Carey praises Visitors as possibly “the book Brookner has spent her life aiming toward.”]

Anita Brookner is a frightening writer. A decade ago, my friend Anne went to Paris for a soul-searching type of vacation and happened at the outset to read three Anita Brookner novels in a row. She did not get out of bed for the rest of her visit. Because of Brookner's almost antiquely elegant prose and the occasional glittering flash of her scalpel, it is easy to forget how truly bleak her vision is. Set beside it, the despair found in most modern novels feels as artificial and forgettable as an advertisement based on the already dated heroin chic.

Since her first work of fiction, the ironically titled novel A Start in Life, published in 1981, Brookner has written...

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