Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Brookner, Anita (Vol. 134) - Joyce Reiser Kornblatt (review date 21 July 1991)


Brookner, Anita (Vol. 134) - Joyce Reiser Kornblatt (review date 21 July 1991)

Joyce Reiser Kornblatt (review date 21 July 1991)

SOURCE: “A Grudge against Their Lovers,” in New York Times Book Review, July 21, 1991, p. 14.

[In the following review, Kornblatt praises Brookner's Brief Lives.]

In Anita Brookner's quiet novels, women document their constricted lives as if summoned, for once, out of their timidity by an anthropologist who is good at getting reluctant subjects to talk. When the elderly narrator of Brief Lives, Fay Langdon, confides that “the grudge that women feel against their lovers is really a desire to be taken seriously,” we hear the plea hidden in her wistful voice: Will we take seriously, as her lovers did not, the story of a woman who “aspired to normality”? Will we attend with interest to the memories of one who only “hankered after a bourgeois calm”?

It is a testimony to Ms. Brookner's gift for portraying the depth beneath the calm that we remain engaged by...

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