- Brookner surname; animal in a Hockney painting; Australian composer
- D. H. Lawrence deplored the English for being this; a biscuit; a favourite Brookner location
- Rhode Island location; Brookner title; 'I may assert eternal __________, / And justify the ways of God to men.'
- Sherlock; Brookner's early mentor; sixteen popes
- Simon's Baie des Anges house; Chekhov play
- Brookner title; singer; character in The Body in the Library
- Herz's street; savage red-haired lord in Trollope; English hills
- Album by the Moments; novels by Brookner and Jennifer Egan
- 'France's least likely diplomat'; Sturgis's one-time favourite; collapsed on the pavement of the rue Neuve-des-Capucines
- Changed to Annie (Ring) in the film of The Age of Innocence; what heroine of Look at Me doesn't like to be called; Mrs Assingham
The much-loved Backlisted podcast ( here ) returns with a 'lockdown' episode that includes a lot of Anita Brookner talk. Prompted by discussion about Hotel du Lac , never the most representative Brookner, the chat meanders pleasantly on to the potential for compiling an Anita Brookner 'Top Ten'. At a loose end myself, though this week at the chalkface entertaining the children of keyworkers, I considered the question myself. I'm sure there are similar such lists elsewhere on this blog - I forget, and I don't particularly want to consult them anyhow. Of course, Brookner - like Henry James, like Trollope, indeed like many prolific authors - passed through phases. Brookner's novels, I contend, fall into three, neatly divided by the decades she wrote in: the raw, vital 80s; the settled magisterial 90s; the bleak, experimental 2000s. A Brookner novel from the 80s seems very different from any of her final works - just as 'James I', 'James II' ...
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