Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Brookner, Anita (Vol. 134) - Max Egremont (review date 7 June 1997)


Brookner, Anita (Vol. 134) - Max Egremont (review date 7 June 1997)

Max Egremont (review date 7 June 1997)

SOURCE: “Rough Winds Do Shake,” in Spectator, June 7, 1997, p. 38.

[In the following review, Egremont admires the transformative and optimistic elements of Brookner's Visitors.]

Mrs Dorothea May is a widow of 70 who lives in a ground-floor flat in a smart district of London. She has the use of a small garden and it is into this that she ventures early on summer mornings, wearing her dead husband Henry's dressing-gown. Slightly cautious in her movements, she suffers from a failing heart, not only in the physical sense, but through sudden capitulation to anxiety. She is childless, in touch only with some of Henry's relations whom she finds overbearing and not entirely sympathetic.

Widowed now for 15 years, she sees her marriage, to an older man whom she is sure that she loved, as an aberration. It had begun late (she had been aged 39) and had interrupted a generally solitary life....

[The entire page is 749 words long]

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