Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Tyler, Anne (Vol. 205) - Anita Brookner (review date 2 June 2001)
Tyler, Anne (Vol. 205) - Anita Brookner (review date 2 June 2001)
Anita Brookner (review date 2 June 2001)
SOURCE: Brookner, Anita. Review of Back When We Were Grownups, by Anne Tyler. Spectator 286, no. 9017 (2 June 2001): 40.
[In the following mixed review, Brookner argues that although Back When We Were Grownups “is as accomplished as ever there are signs that the formula may be showing its age.”]
Anne Tyler's protagonists [in Back When We Were Grownups] are dutiful, wistful people who, after a lifetime of looking after others, plan a timid and almost overlooked rebellion, such as walking away from a family picnic, or contacting a long-lost friend. Rebecca Davitch has every excuse for leaving her nearest and dearest, since they all have names like Patch, Min Foo, NoNo, Jeep, Zeb, Troy, Hakim and Dixon. These irritating people, as irritating as their names, are the extended family of a typically hapless matriarch, a professional party organiser who is more successful than the...
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- Introduction
- Principal Works
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Criticism
- Sanjukta Dasgupta (essay date winter 1997)
- Elizabeth Mahn Nollen (essay date 1997)
- James Grove (essay date 1997)
- Linda Simon (review date August 1998)
- Joyce R. Durham (essay date fall 1998)
- Cheryl Devon Coleman (essay date summer 2000)
- Nora Foster Stovel (review date January 2001)
- Heidi Slettedahl Macpherson (essay date spring 2001)
- Anita Brookner (review date 2 June 2001)
- Ellen Cronan Rose (review date July 2001)
- Rita D. Jacobs (review date spring 2002)
- Barbara Harrell Carson (essay date fall-winter 2002)
- Paul Christian Jones (essay date spring 2003)
- Publishers Weekly (review date 22 December 2003)
- Anita Brookner (review date 3 January 2004)
- Further Reading
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