Criticism > Contemporary Literary Criticism > Tyler, Anne (Vol. 205) - Rita D. Jacobs (review date spring 2002)
Tyler, Anne (Vol. 205) - Rita D. Jacobs (review date spring 2002)
Rita D. Jacobs (review date spring 2002)
SOURCE: Jacobs, Rita D. Review of Back When We Were Grownups, by Anne Tyler. World Literature Today 76, no. 2 (spring 2002): 154.
[In the following review, Jacobs claims that although Back When We Were Grownups is a good read, it is not one of Tyler's best novels.]
Anne Tyler's characters can be so familiar and so fully imagined and presented that reading a Tyler novel is a bit like visiting with the family down the road, albeit a family with many quirks. in Back When We Were Grownups Rebecca Davitch, a fifty-three-year-old grandmother who runs a catering business, The Open Arms, in her home, is trying to make sense of her past and define her future against the backdrop of fashioning celebrations of life's events for strangers.
Rebecca is left alone after her husband's death to deal with three grown stepdaughters and one grown daughter of her own. The plot is fairly...
[The entire page is 561 words long]
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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)
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