Fraud , Anita Brookner's twelfth novel, was published in 1992. I was then, I guess, in the early stages of my fandom. I ordered the book from the library I worked in part-time, was first on the waiting list. When I met Anita Brookner by chance (or design - see here ) a month or so later I was able to tell her I'd finished her latest. She was, I recall, surprised. 'Already?' she said. Even then, and in spite of the training I was receiving at the hands of my university tutors, I was always on the lookout for parallels between an author's life and works. Fraud struck me as rather interestingly close. The physical description of Anna Durrant in chapter 1, for example, could be of Brookner herself. And then there's the proximity of Anna's and Brookner's flats. Anna moves to Cranley Gardens, a mere stone's throw across the Fulham Road from Elm Park Gardens. All of which lent a frisson to my first reading of Fraud . Beginning a reread, all these yea...
'I suppose what one wants really is ideal company and books are ideal company.'