Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Brophy, Brigid (Antonia) - Martin Tucker
Brophy, Brigid (Antonia) - Martin Tucker
MARTIN TUCKER
Brigid Brophy is not an English master builder. She constructs her novels on traditional patterns, then decorates them with bon mots and allusions. A visitor to one of her fanciful stage-sets treads on familiar ground: if the settings are often more brilliantly conveyed than the people who perform in them, the fault does not lie with her, since she is interested in appearances, not reality. Her eye focuses on the costumes and inflections people adopt in order to keep up their pretenses: the art of disguise—public and private, verbal and psychic, therapeutic and destructive—is the subject matter on which she trains her loaded camera. From this vantage point she develops comic negatives that are deadly, lucid and funny.
In the two novellas ["The Snow Ball" and "The Finishing Touch"] that make up her new book, she does not try to disguise her interest in masks. The longer of the two stories, "The Snow Ball," is nominally about a...
[The entire page is 476 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
