Latecomers Audiobook By Anita Brookner cover art

Latecomers

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Latecomers

By: Anita Brookner
Narrated by: Andrew Sachs
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About this listen

Hartmann was a German, Fibich an orphan of World War II....

A novel about human relationships, focusing, unusually for Brookner, on two male characters. Hartmann and Fibich met at school and 40 years later they can no more think of living apart than of divorcing their wives. This book deals with their gradual coming to terms with the emotional gaps in their lives.

©1998 Anita Brookner (P)2014 Audible, Inc.
Coming of Age Fiction Literary Fiction Women's Fiction
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Subtle Study of Characters

In one of her later interviews, Anita Brookner said she thought she should have won the Booker Prize for this novel, not Hotel du Lac. Latecomers is the story of a lifelong friendship between two men who meet in boarding school after the trauma of WWII. It is a short novel, but covers their lives and the lives of their wives, children, and grandchildren. It moves through decades quickly, often in the form of summary. It's oddly constructed but, like everything Brookner wrote, beautifully observed and deeply felt and with magnificently crafted sentences. There's not much in the way of plot, but the book's dissection of character is often compelling. There's something solemn about this novel, but it still has Brookner's gorgeous wit and flashes of humor. Andrew Sachs reads beautifully and uses his voice with artful subtlety to make distinctions in characters and accents.

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More Details than Plot

Andrew Sachs brings the characters to life in this audio book. The plot is simple and not particularly compelling. If I had picked this up as a paperback, I doubt I would have finished it.
That said, Andrew Sachs’ performance made the rambling story enjoyable. It was as if for 20 minutes on my drive to work and from work a close friend told me a detailed story about strangers he knew well. I wasn’t all that interested, but it was something to listen to and Sachs seemed to enjoy talking about these characters.

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Reflection of lives lived.

In this story, life doesn't always turn out how we expect it to, (speaking as if by one of the two main characters.) However, there is much to love in our lives. The lives that we have lived have been good, even if we don't succeed in reconciling with our pasts. The circumstances from whence we began our lives, (through no fault of ourselves, nor of anyone else), are ours to work at overcoming for the duration. Beloved spouses, children, and close friends are cherished, as imperfect as they may be. There is much to be grateful for.

Through the author's talent in detailing the thinking--of the unique psyches--of each character, I came to know and understand each one well, even as the characters were much different from one another. As with the other books I've read by Brookner, her consummate talent in expressing her characters' sensibilities, feelings and emotions, has deeply moved me, once again, in The Latecomers.

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Tea and Sympathy

This is a sympathetic look at two families. Everyone is trying their best, their best foot forward, though it’s hard at times. But they come through. What’s dated in the book is that it’s very unpolitical. It’s a bubble of privilege untouched by the world outside. At the sentence level, it’s delicious. Brookner serves cosmopolitan elegance and the excellent narrator, Andrew Sachs, is a match to her. He’s poised and he nails the French and German words with which Brookner seasons the narrative.

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Nothing short of brilliant.

Brookner and Sachs at their very best, story unusually optimistic and very moving; highly recommended.

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Chamber music in exile

Unusually for the author this book is an intimate examination of a family, both real and acquired through exile. A melancholy, elegaic tone permeates a relatively short account of multiple lives linked to two men who escaped Germany as children in the last days before WW2. After meeting by chance they become brothers in adversity and, although so different, they begin a shared life in London. Prosperity, marriages and children eventually follow.

Many authors would turn this kind of down through the years, multi-generational narrative into a door-stopper epic. Brookner does not. As usual she is interested in the inner lives of her characters and their comings and goings are seldom described in detail.

It is also not her best work. In attempting to explore multiple characters in the same book she is not able to reach the same meticulous focus she usually achieves with her single protagonist novels. The reading by Andrew Sachs is exemplary but that lack of sharp focus hinders engagement.

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