Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Brophy, Brigid (Antonia) - Gene Baro
Brophy, Brigid (Antonia) - Gene Baro
GENE BARO
Wit at once gentle and penetrating, a style both pleasant and forceful, and the ability to render clearly a variety of complex personal and social situations and to elucidate their meanings—these characteristics mark the work of Brigid Brophy. The six stories of "The Crown Princess" are in a most civilized tradition of English writing; restrained, sometimes muted, they are nevertheless richly perceptive and suggestive of difficult human truths.
One reason for this is that Miss Brophy is able to relate a limited subject to the larger social and moral issues that surround and shape it. Such a story as "Mrs. Mandford's Drawing Room," which deals with the attritions of wartime upon the manners and values of an English county family, is implicit with the massive alterations that overtook all elements of English society during the second world war. The fate of the Mandfords is seen as both individual and typical. At the last, it is Geoffrey Mandford's...
[The entire page is 437 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Introduction
- The Times Literary Supplement
- Gene Baro
- Pearl Kazin
- Dan Wickenden
- Charles J. Rolo
- Maurice Richardson
- The Times Literary Supplement
- Joseph L. Quinn
- Martin Tucker
- Eve Auchincloss
- Naomi Bliven
- The Times Literary Supplement
- Anthony Burgess
- Victor Strauss
- Anthony Burgess
- Alan Levensohn
- Edward Weeks
- Joyce Carol Oates
- Time
- Hermione Lee
- Alan Hollinghurst
- Marilyn Butler
- Copyright
