Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Brookner, Anita (Vol. 134) - Jonathan Yardley (review date 9 January 1994)


Brookner, Anita (Vol. 134) - Jonathan Yardley (review date 9 January 1994)

Jonathan Yardley (review date 9 January 1994)

SOURCE: “More Excellent Women,” in Washington Post Book Review, January 9, 1994, p. 3.

[In the following review, Yardley offers high praise for Dolly.]

Anita Brookner is a novelist at once immensely rewarding and immensely vexing, but in Dolly she has chosen to be exclusively the first of these. Of the dozen novels that have preceded this one, all but a couple are elegant yet attenuated: withdrawn from “the menacing outer world” in which most of us live, rich in feeling yet devoid of passion, sophisticated yet airless. None of this can be said of Dolly. On its own, Brooknerian terms it meets the world, engages the passions, lives and breathes. Not merely is it the best of its author's novels; it is—on its own, Brooknerian terms—close to perfection.

To which a caveat must at once be attached. Brookner, even more than most original and distinctive writers, is...

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