Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Brookner, Anita (Vol. 134) - Robert Jones (review date 20 September 1985)


Brookner, Anita (Vol. 134) - Robert Jones (review date 20 September 1985)

Robert Jones (review date 20 September 1985)

SOURCE: “Romancing the Novel,” in Commonweal, September 20, 1985, pp. 502-03.

[In the following review, Jones offers a negative assessment of Hotel du Lac.]

Romance novels are one of the most conservative forms of fiction, but even they have made concessions to the social revolution of the twentieth century. Mass-audience gothic novels once included among their characters orphaned governesses with a penchant for handsome landowners; now even in the world of Harlequin romances, the heroine is allowed a career in the larger world and may swoon less coyly at the feet of the dashing bodice-ripper. The popularity of the fiction lies in its predictability; more than in any other form of writing, the dimensions of its world are determined by the demands of its audience. There is no peril in selecting a romance novel: the reader is guaranteed a happy ending, and no anti-nuclear activists or...

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