Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Brookner, Anita (Vol. 134) - William McPherson (review date 10 February 1985)


Brookner, Anita (Vol. 134) - William McPherson (review date 10 February 1985)

William McPherson (review date 10 February 1985)

SOURCE: “Anita Brookner: The Autumn of Romance,” in Washington Post Book World, February 10, 1985, pp. 1-2.

[In the following review, McPherson offers a favorable assessment of Hotel du Lac.]

Edith Hope, the protagonist of this highly acclaimed novel from Britain, winner of the 1984 Booker Prize, has done an “apparently dreadful thing,” although the reader does not know exactly what that thing is or how dreadful until two-thirds of the way through Anita Brookner's slim and elegant and rather Jamesian novel, her fourth. By that time, of course, the diligent reader is hooked. Which is more or less the idea.

Entertainment, after all, is a perfectly legitimate reason for reading, and to find out what happens next—or, in the case of Hotel du Lac, what improper thing has already happened to precipitate Edith's flight from London to a fairly ghastly and very proper...

[The entire page is 1073 words long]

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