Anita Brookner CBE (born 16 July 1928) is a British, Booker award-winning novelist and art historian. Read full biography of Anita Brookner →
No blame should attach to telling the truth. But it does, it does.
Accountability in friendship is the equivalent of love without strategy.
Great writers are the saints for the godless.
Like many rich men, he thought in anecdotes; like many simple women, she thought in terms of biography.
The lessons taught in great books are misleading. The commerce in life is rarely so simple and never so just.
All good fortune is a gift of the gods, and you don't win the favor of the ancient gods by being good, but by being bold.
Old men should have more care to end life well than to live long.
I've never got on very well with Jane Austen.
If I were happy, married with six children, I wouldn't be writing. And I doubt if I should want to.
I was brought up to look after my parents. My family were Polish Jews, and we lived with my grandmother, with uncles and aunts and cousins all... →
People say that I am always serious and depressing, but it seems to me that the English are never serious - they are flippant, complacent, ineffable... →
What is interesting about self-analysis is that it leads nowhere - it is an art form in itself.
You have no idea how promising the world begins to look once you have decided to have it all for yourself. And how much healthier your decisions are... →