Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Brophy, Brigid (Antonia) - Joseph L. Quinn
Brophy, Brigid (Antonia) - Joseph L. Quinn
JOSEPH L. QUINN
In Flesh and Hackenfeller's Ape Brigid Brophy established herself as a very intelligent, very assured, and very capable writer of fiction, much on the order of Mary McCarthy…. [With The Snow Ball and The Finishing Touch, Brophy] takes what her publishers call "a new turn," combining Mary McCarthy's cool, underplayed humor with the formful precision and striking prose of an Elizabeth Bowen.
The Snow Ball, the first and much the longer of these two "little novels," is a modern, sophisticated, seriocomic playlet set in an eighteenth-century town house during a New Year's Eve costume ball. While this story of a modern Donna Anna will especially appeal to Mozart and Don Juan aficionados, it has quite enough sex, social satire, and sheer literary brilliance to charm and/or amuse operatic laymen as well.
It is The Finishing Touch, however, that makes this book something very special indeed....
[The entire page is 358 words long]
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