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Leaving Home

By Anita Brookner

(5)

| Paperback | 9781400095650

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Book Description

At twenty-six, Emma Roberts comes to the painful realization that if she is ever to become truly independent, she must leave her comfortable London flat and venture into the wider world. This entails not only breaking free from a claustrophobic relationship with her mother, but also shedding her inhContinue

At twenty-six, Emma Roberts comes to the painful realization that if she is ever to become truly independent, she must leave her comfortable London flat and venture into the wider world. This entails not only breaking free from a claustrophobic relationship with her mother, but also shedding her inherited tendency toward melancholy. Once settled in a small Paris hotel, Emma befriends Fran?oise Desnoyers, a vibrant young woman who offers Emma a glimpse into a turbulent life so different from her own.

In this exquisite new novel of self-discovery, Booker Prize-winner Anita Brookner addresses one of the great dramas of our lives: growing up and leaving home.

Critics

  • Family matters

    Leaving Home by Anita Brookner 176pp, Viking, £16.99 Is There Anything You Want? by Margaret Forster 244pp, Chatto, £16.99 A novel every other year - that's what publishers want. Authors with large overdrafts have no trouble understanding why. It's a ... (read full critics)

    guardian.co.uk published on Sat, 25 Sep 2010

  • Fiction

    Leaving Home Anita Brookner Penguin £7.99 When graduate Emma Roberts leaves home for Paris to study the straight lines and clipped symmetry of classical garden design, she hopes to apply the same formal principles to find orderly solutions in her own ... (read full critics)

    guardian.co.uk published on Sat, 25 Sep 2010

1 Review

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  • Beautifully Written Novel, with a Stagnant, Distant Character

    After reading a couple of online interviews and other pieces about Anita Brookner, a distinctive personality profile starts to emerge. Professionally trained as an art historian, she taught at the Courtauld Institute and developed a reputation as a rather distinguished academic. She didn't publish h ... (continue)

    After reading a couple of online interviews and other pieces about Anita Brookner, a distinctive personality profile starts to emerge. Professionally trained as an art historian, she taught at the Courtauld Institute and developed a reputation as a rather distinguished academic. She didn't publish her first novel, "A Start in Life," until she was in her fifties. She almost never gives interviews, is known among friends as being extraordinarily intelligent, and according to herself, wants nothing more than to be left alone. She has never married, stating "I chose the wrong people, and the wrong people chose me. So it never came about. At the time that was a cause of great sadness, certainly."

    Much like in the novels of J. M. Coetzee, we must only engage in a willful suspension of disbelief when we are asked to assume Brookner's storyline is more novel than memoir. Emma, the novel's protagonist, is strikingly like Brookner herself: cold, distant, aloof, and perhaps eager for excitement, but would think it gauche to ever outwardly show that eagerness. Feeling trapped by her suffocating relationship with her mother (who, by the way, also highly resembles Brookner), Emma moves to Paris to study the designs of French palatial gardens, unconsciously thinking this might bring some sort of linearity to her otherwise disordered personal life.

    Once she arrives in Paris, she slowly befriends Francoise Desnoyers, who works in the library where Emma regularly studies. She quickly pegs Francoise as a sort of libertine, only to realize that she too has an awkward, cumbersome relationship with her mother. Instead of the rational progress she envisioned that could be easily transferred from her study of gardens to her personal life, she is stupefied by the similarity of her circumstances. Once Emma is introduced to Francoise's mother, she is quickly drawn into her family's circle, with their outré manners and bizarre rituals.

    Brookner, much like she has teased herself with the idea of happiness and fulfillment in real life, has done the same thing with Emma here. She meets men, and while she may be open-minded regarding her possible success in a romantic relationship, the reader gets the distinct impression that her overbearing cynicism and willful jadedness will crush any living thing within a mile. The message of the novel, if there is one, may very well be "growing is impossible, and don't be so naïve as to think there is anything called happiness."

    Brookner's style, on the other hand, left a wholly different impression on me. She can certainly write. She does it beautifully. Many of the sentences reminded me of early Henry James, with the kind of formal premeditation for which I have always had a fondness. Other reviews have suggested that "Hotel Du Lac" is a better novel, and it might be. But "Leaving Home" left me tired with its message of intellectual and emotional stagnation and utter pessimism.

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    Kant1066 said on Dec 1, 2011 | Add your feedback

Book Details

  • Rating:
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  • English Books
  • Paperback 224 Pages
  • Edition: Reprint
  • ISBN-10: 1400095654
  • ISBN-13: 9781400095650
  • Publisher: Vintage
  • Pub date: Feb 13, 2007
  • Dimensions: 1290 mm x 839 mm x 129 mm Just how big is that?
  • Also available as: Hardcover, Audio CD and Audio Cassette
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