Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Brookner, Anita (Vol. 134) - John Bayley (review date 18 June 1994)


Brookner, Anita (Vol. 134) - John Bayley (review date 18 June 1994)

John Bayley (review date 18 June 1994)

SOURCE: “The Man Who Has Nothing to Offer,” in Spectator, June 18, 1994, p. 33

[In the following review, Bayley offers high praise for A Private View, terming Brookner “both infinitely various and adorably unique.”]

Adorable Anita Brookner! And as adorable as a man as she is as a woman! But steady the buffs, that's hardly something one can say in these unisex days. Nor would it be much more PC to call her as good a woman writer when she is exploring a man, as when she is delicately probing the susceptibilities of one of her own sex.

In the writerly sense she has been a man before, in her fourth novel back, Lewis Percy, a study as uniquely unusual and distinguished as all her novels are, in their very different ways. For although it is commonly said that her world, and those who live in it, are always much the same, nothing, in the deeper sense, could be further from...

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