Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Brookner, Anita (Vol. 134) - Rosemary Dinnage (review date 1 June 1989)


Brookner, Anita (Vol. 134) - Rosemary Dinnage (review date 1 June 1989)

Rosemary Dinnage (review date 1 June 1989)

SOURCE: “Exiles,” in New York Review of Books, June 1, 1989, pp. 34-6.

[In the following excerpt, Dinnage provides an overview of Brookner's novels and gives a favorable assessment of Latecomers.]

Twenty years ago the art historian Anita Brookner was Slade Professor at Cambridge, author of a book on Watteau and then, within a few years, of books on Greuze and on Jacques-Louis David. Her first novel, A Start in Life, came out only in 1981; and since then she has written one in each summer vacation, and collected two literary prizes and a television adaptation. Latecomers is her eighth novel.

“Her books are so English,” an American friend said to me; by “English” meaning, perhaps, reserved, fastidious, ironic. Certainly she makes some American women writers look disheveled and a little vulgar, like the particularly unpleasant woman who reappears in different...

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