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Anita Brookner, Booker Prize-winning author, dies age 87, Times announces Anita Brookner, Booker Prize-winning author, dies aged 87
(about 4 hours later)
Anita Brookner, the Booker prize-winning British author and renowned art historian, has died at the age of 87, according to a notice in the Times. Anita Brookner, the Booker prize-winning British author and renowned art historian, has died at the age of 87.
Brookner, who won the Booker in 1984 for her novel Hotel du Lac, was a bestselling author who wrote 25 books. She won the Booker in 1984 for her novel Hotel du Lac, one of 25 books she wrote after a distinguished career as an art historian.
According to the Times notice, she died peacefully in her sleep on 10 March. According to a notice of her death in the Times, she died peacefully in her sleep on 10 March.
Fellow novelist Jilly Cooper told the paper she was a "wonderful writer" who was "an icon [of] my age". Fellow novelist Jilly Cooper paid tribute to her "wonderful lucid prose", and said she was "an icon of my age".
Critical acclaim London-born, Anita Brookner began writing fiction in her 50s.
London-born Brookner, who was made CBE in 1990, began writing in her 50s after a distinguished career as an art historian. She had already been the first woman to hold the Slade professorship of fine art at Cambridge University, and taught at the Courtauld Institute of Art.
She was the first woman to hold the prestigious Slade professorship of fine art at Cambridge University, and taught at the Courtauld Institute of Art. 'Serious writer'
Her first novel, A Start in Life, was published in 1981 and she went on to win critical acclaim. Her most recent work, the novella At The Hairdresser's, was published in 2011. Her first novel, A Start in Life, was published in 1981, and she went on to publish a book almost every year for the next three decades. Her most recent work, the novella At The Hairdresser's, was published in 2011.
However, according to The Times, she was a private character who declined most interviews and invitations to book signings or talks. Cooper told the Times she "never stopped watching and observing", and described her as a "serious, serious writer who was very spare in her prose.
Cooper, who paid tribute to her "wonderful lucid prose", said: "I used to watch her at parties and everybody else was getting legless while she was just observing everybody. She never stopped watching and observing." "I used to watch her at parties and everybody else was getting legless while she was just observing everybody."
Born in 1928, Brookner was the only child of Polish Jewish parents who opened their London home to refugees escaping persecution by the Nazis during World War Two. Born in 1928, Anita Brookner was the only child of Polish Jewish parents who opened their London home to refugees escaping persecution by the Nazis during World War Two.
As a young woman she spent three years studying in Paris as a postgraduate, and reportedly said she had "never been so happy".As a young woman she spent three years studying in Paris as a postgraduate, and reportedly said she had "never been so happy".
But she often spoke of how her family's roots made her feel like an outsider in the UK, once saying in an interview that she had "never learnt the custom of the country... we were aliens... tribal".But she often spoke of how her family's roots made her feel like an outsider in the UK, once saying in an interview that she had "never learnt the custom of the country... we were aliens... tribal".
She never married or had children - and, in a rare interview with the Telegraph in 2009, said: "That's why I write. Because I have no children."She never married or had children - and, in a rare interview with the Telegraph in 2009, said: "That's why I write. Because I have no children."
Made a CBE in 1990, she was best known for exploring themes of social isolation through her female protagonists.
Hotel du Lac tells the story of romantic novelist Edith Hope, who is banished by her friends after breaking off an engagement, and goes to stay in a hotel on the shores of Lake Geneva.
There she meets an assortment of people, and observing them helps her to understand what course she should take in life.
'Master of incisive fiction''Master of incisive fiction'
Hotel du Lac tells the story of romantic novelist Edith Hope, who is banished by her friends after breaking off an engagement, and goes to stay in a hotel on the shores of Lake Geneva, where she meets an assortment of people, and observing them helps her to understand what couyrse she should take in life. The book was seen by some critics as a surprise winner, but became one of the top ten bestselling books of the 1980s and was adapted for a BBC television drama in 1986.
It was seen by some critics as a surprise winner, but became one of the top ten bestselling books of the 1980s and was adapted for a BBC television drama in 1986.
Her other books included The Rules of Engagement and The Next Big Thing.Her other books included The Rules of Engagement and The Next Big Thing.
Readers and fellow-writers paid tribute to the author following the news of her death.Readers and fellow-writers paid tribute to the author following the news of her death.
Orange Prize-winning novelist Linda Grant tweeted: "Oh, I admired her so much. An underrated master of incisive fiction and laser prose Anita Brookner.Orange Prize-winning novelist Linda Grant tweeted: "Oh, I admired her so much. An underrated master of incisive fiction and laser prose Anita Brookner.
"Always felt an affinity with Anita Brookner, her nervous Jews in overheated overfurnished flats in St Johns Wood," she added. "Always felt an affinity with Anita Brookner, her nervous Jews in overheated overfurnished flats in St John's Wood," she added.
Author Lady Antonia Fraser said Hotel du Lac was wonderful. "In a strange way it was pathfinding. I much respected her."Author Lady Antonia Fraser said Hotel du Lac was wonderful. "In a strange way it was pathfinding. I much respected her."
Ron Charles, editor of Book World at the Washington Post, tweeted: "Very sorry to hear of Anita Brookner's passing. No one captured the rhythms of loneliness as brilliantly as she did."
A notice of her death said Dr Brookner, of Chelsea, had requested not to have a funeral.