The New Criterion
(Mobile Version)

Fiction Chronicle

May 2001

Blurring the borders

by Brooke Allen

Less flashy than her compatriots and contemporaries Martin Amis and Julian Barnes, Pat Barker has, over the last couple of decades, been quietly building up a body of work that more than holds its own against theirs or that of any other writer of her generation. Her Regeneration trilogy, dealing with the First World War, is one of the most powerful pieces of fiction in recent years; its brilliant last volume, The Ghost Road, was awarded the Booker Prize. Her last novel Another World (1998) was an extraordinarily moving exploration of hatred and love between siblings.

In her new book Border Crossing,[1] Barker continues to probe many of the themes and questions she raised in Another World. Is anyone and everyone capable of committing an evil act? (The answer would seem to be yes.) Does an evil act make an evil person? Should an ordinary person, neither less nor more evil tha ...

This article is available to subscribers and for individual purchase

Log in

Brooke Allens latest book is Moral Minority: Our Skeptical Founding Fathers (Ivan R Dee)
more from this author


This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 19 May 2001, on page 62
Copyright © 2012 The New Criterion | www.newcriterion.com


E-mail to friend(s)