Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Brookner, Anita (Vol. 134) - Phillip Lopate (review date 11 March 1990)


Brookner, Anita (Vol. 134) - Phillip Lopate (review date 11 March 1990)

Phillip Lopate (review date 11 March 1990)

SOURCE: “Can Innocence Go Unpunished?,” in New York Times Book Review, March 11, 1990, p. 10.

[In the following review, Lopate proffers a positive assessment of Lewis Percy.]

The reader approaching Anita Brookner's novels for the first time may be permitted a certain skepticism. Is she really as good as the critics say? And if so, how can she be so prolific? This convert's answer would be: yes, she is that good, and she keeps producing quality fiction at a calm, even rate precisely because she knows what she is doing.

Each new Brookner novel seems a guarantee of the pleasures of a mature intelligence, felicitous language, quirky humor, intensely believable characters, bitter-sweet karma and shapely narrative. Some tastes may find her structures too neat, her academic milieu too constricting, her themes too consistent. But the charge that she writes essentially the same book over...

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