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World's Greatest Classic Books Feature: Adeline Virginia Woolf |
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Born: January 25, 1882, in Hyde
Park Gate, London, England. Died: March 28, 1941, in Rodmell, Sussex, England British author who made an original contribution to the form of the novel - also distinguished feminist essayist, critic in The Times Literary Supplement, and a central figure of Bloomsbury group. Woolf's books were published by Hogart Press, which she founded with her husband, the critic and writer Leonard Woolf. Originally their printing machine was small enough to fit on a kitchen table, but their publications later included T.S. Eliot's Waste Land (1922), fiction by Maksim Gorky, E.M. Forster, and Katherine Mansfield, and the complete twenty-four-volume translation of the works of Sigmund Freud.
Virginia Woolf was born in London, as the daughter of Julia Jackson Duckworth, a member of the Duckworth publishing family, and Leslie Stephen, a literary critic, a friend of Meredith, Henry James, Tennyson, Matthew Arnold, and George Eliot, and the founder of the Dictionary of National Biography. Leslie Stephen's first wife had been the daughter of the novelist William Makepeace Thackeray. His daughter Laura from the first marriage was institutionalized because of mental retardation. In a memoir dated 1907 she wrote of her parents, "Beautiful often, even to our eyes, were their gestures, their glances of pure and unutterable delight in each other." Woolf was educated at home by her father, and grew up at the family home at Hyde Park Gate. In mddle age she described this period in a letter to Vita Sackville-West: "Think how I was brought up! No school; mooning about alone among my father's books; never any chance to pick up all that goes on in schoolsthrowing balls; ragging; slang; vulgarities; scenes; jealousies!" Woolf's youth was shadowed by series of emotional shocks - her half-brother Gerald Duckworth sexually abused her and her mother died when she was in her early teens. Stella Duckworth, her half sister, took her mother's place, but died a scant two years later. Leslie Stephen, her father, suffered a slow death from cancer. When her brother Toby died in 1906, she had a prolonged mental breakdown. Following the death of her father in 1904, Woolf moved with her sister Vanessa and two brothers to the house in Bloomsbury, which would become central to activities of the Bloomsbury group. "And part of the charm of those Thursday evenings was that they were astonishingly abstract. It was not only that Moore's book [Principia Ethica, 1903] had set us all discussing philosophy, art, religion; it was that the atmosphere - if in spite of Hawtrey I may use that word - was abstract in the extreme. The young men I have named had no 'manners' in the Hyde Park Gate sense. They criticized our arguments as severely as their own. They never seemed to notice how we were dressed or if we were nice looking or not." (from Moments of Being, ed. by Jeanne Schulkind, 1976) Vanessa agreed to marry the critic of art and literature Clive Bell. Virginia's economic situation improved she she inherited �2,500 from an aunt. From 1905 Woolf began to write for the Times Literary Supplement. In 1912 she married the political theorist Leonard Woolf, who had returned from serving as an administarator in Ceylon (now Sri Lanka). Woolf published her first book, THE VOYAGE OUT, in 1915. In 1919 appeared NIGHT AND DAY, a realistic novel set in London, contrasting the lives of two friends, Katherine and Mary. JACOB'S ROOM (1922) was based upon the life and death of her brother Toby. With TO THE LIGHTHOUSE (1927) and THE WAVES (1931) Woolf established herself as one of the leading writers of modernism. On the publication of To the Lighthouse, Lytton Strachey wrote: "It is really most unfortunate that she rules out copulation - not the ghost of it visible - so that her presentation of things becomes little more... than an arabesque - an exquisite arabesque, of course." The Waves is perhaps Woolf's most difficult novel. It follows in soliloquies the lives of six persons from childhood to old age. Louis Kronenberger noted in The New York Times that Woolf was not really corncerned with people, but "the poetic symbols, of life--the changing seasons, day and night, bread and wine, fire and cold, time and space, birth and death and change." In these works Woolf developed innovative literary techniques in order to reveal women's experience and find an alternative to the male-dominated views of reality. In her essay 'Mr. Bennett and Mrs. Brown' Woolf argued that John Galsworthy, H.G. Wells and other realistic English novelist dealt in surfaces but to get underneath these surfaces one must use less restricted presentation of life, and such devices as stream of consciousness and interior monologue and abandon linear narrative. MRS DALLOWAY (1925) formed a giant web of thoughts of several groups of people during the course of a single day. There is little action, but much movement in time from present to past and back again through the characters memories. The central figure, Clarissa Dalloway, is a wealthy London hostess. She spends her day in London preparing for her evening party. She recalls her life before World War I, berofe her marriage to Richard Dalloway, and her friendship with the unconventional Sally Seton, and her relationship with Peter Walsh. At her party she never meets the shell-shocked veteran Septimus Smith, one of the first Englishmen to enlist in the war. Sally returns as Lady Rossetter, Peter Walsh is still enamored with Mrs. Dalloway, the prime minister arrives, and Smith commits suicide. To the Lighthouse had a tripartite structure: part 1 presented the Victorian family life, the second part covers a ten-year period, and the third part is a long account of a morning in which ghosts are laid to rest. The central figure in the novel, Mrs. Ramsay, was based on Woolf's mother. Also other characters in the book were drawn from Woolf's family memories.
During the inter-war period Woolf was at the center of literary society both in London and at her home in Rodmell, near Lewes, Sussex. She lived in Richmond from 1915 to 1924, in Bloomsbury from 1924 to 1939, and maintained the house in Romdell from 1919-41. The Bloomsbury group was initially based at the Gordon Square residence of Virginia and her sister Vanessa (Bell). The consolidation of the group's beliefs in unifying aesthetic concerns occurred under the influence of the philosopher G.E. Moore (1873-1958). The group included among others E.M. Forster, Lytton Strachey, Clive Bell, Vanessa Bell, Duncan Grant, and Leonard Woolf. By the early 1930s, the group ceased to exist in its original form. In the event of a Nazi invastion, Woolf and Leonard had made provisions to kill themselves. After the final attack of mental illness Woolf loaded her pockets with stones and drowned herself in the River Ouse near her Sussex home on March 28, 1941. On her note to her husband she wrote: "I have a feeling I shall go mad. I cannot go on longer in these terrible times. I hear voices and cannot concentrate on my work. I have fought against it but cannot fight any longer. I owe all my happiness to you but cannot go on and spoil your life." Her suicide has colored interpretations of her works, which have been read perhaps too straightly as explorations of her own traumas. Virginia Woolf's concern with feminist thematics are dominant in A ROOM OF ONE'S OWN (1929). In it she made her famous statement: "A woman must have money and a room of her own if she is to write fiction." The book originated from two expanded and revised lectures the author presented at Cambridge University's Newnham and Girton Colleges in October 1928. It deals with the obstacles and prejudices that have hindered women writers, and analyzes the differences between women as objects of representation and women as authors of representation. Woolf argued that a change in the forms of literature was necessary because most literature had been "made by men out of their own needs for their own uses." In the last chapter it explores the possibility of an androgynous mind. Woolf refers to Coleridge who said that a great mind is androgynous and states that when this fusion takes place the mind is fully fertilized and uses all its faculties. "Perhaps a mind that is purely masculine cannot create, any more than a mind that is purely feminine..." THREE GUINEAS (1938) examined the necessity for women to make a claim for their own history and literature. ORLANDO (1928), a fantasy novel, traced the career of the androgynous protagonist from a masculine identity within the Elisabethan court to a feminine identity in 1928. The book was illustrated with pictures of Woolf's lover, Vita Sackville-West, dressed as Orlando. According to Nigel Nicolson, the initiative to start the affair came as much on Virginia's side as on the more experienced Vita's. Their relationship coincided with a period of great creative productivity in Woolf's career as a writer. In 1994 Eileen Atkins dramatized their letters in her play Vita and Virginia, starring Atkins and Vanessa Redgrave. As an essayist Woolf was prolific, publishing some 500 essays in periodicals and collections, beginning 1905. Characteristic for Woolf's essays are dialogic nature of style and continual questioning of opinion - her reader is often directly addressed, in a conversational tone, and her rejection of an authoritative voice links her essays to the tradition of Montaigne. Leonard (Sidney) Woolf (1880-1969) - Born in London as the son of a barrister. Woolf studied at Cambridge and in 1904 he went into civil service to Ceylon. His first book, The Village in the Jungle, appeared in 1913. Woolf joined the Fabian Society and wrote for The New Statesman. From 1923 to 1930 he was a literary editor on the Nation. In 1917 he set up a small hand press at Hogart House, and worked as the director of the Hogarth Press until his death. Among Woolf's works are novels, non-fiction and his five volume memoirs Sowing (1960), Growing (1961), Beginning Again (1964), Downhill All the Way (1967) and The Journey Not the Arrival Matters (1969). - For further information: Leonard Woolf by S.S. Myerowitz (1982); A Marriage of True Minds by G. Spater and I.M. Parsons (1977) - For further reading: Virginia Woolf by Quentin Bell (1972, 2 vols.); Moments of Being, ed. by Jeanne Schulkind (1976); The Novels of Virginia Woolf from Beninning to End by M.A. Leaska (1977); Virginia Woolf: A Feminist Slant by by J. Marcus (1983); Woman of Letters by Rose Phyllis (1978); Virginia Woolf: a Writer's Life by Lyndall Gordon (1984); Virginia Woolf by Rachel Bowlby (1988); Virginia Woolf and the Fictions of Psychoanalysis by Elizabeth Abel (1989); Virginia Woolf: The Impact of Childhood Sexual Abuse on Her Life and Work by Louise DeSalvo (1989); Virginia Woolf: A Literary Life by John Mepham (1991); Virginia Woolf: A Collection of Critical Essays by M. Homans (1993); Vita and Virginia by Suzanne Raitt (1993); Virginia Woolf by Quentin Bell (1996); The Feminist Aesthetics of Virginia Woolf by Jane Goldman (1998); Virginia Woolf by Hermione Lee (1996); Virginia Woolf by Nigel Nicolson (2000) - Note: Toni Morrison, who won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1993, wrote her thesis at Cornell University on Faulkner and Virginia Woolf. - See also: Katherine Mansfield, Marcel Proust |
Biographies:
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SELECTED WORKS:
Virginia Woolf's extraordinary first novel, published in 1915 after she had suffered a succession of severe mental crises, tells the story of a young Englishwoman, Rachel Vinrace, and her long sea voyage to South America, her engagement to Terence Hewett and her sudden illness and death. This definitive edition contains the original Hogarth Press text as overseen by the author. | |
Set in London before World War I, this novel explores the truth of feelings and particularly the nature of love. It is, in that sense, a love story, but in the hands of Virginia Woolf, it transcends conventional romance to pose a series of crucial questions about women, intellectual freedom, and marriage. | |
One of the most distinguished critics and
innovative authors of the 20th century, Virginia Woolf published two novels before this
collection appeared in 1921. However, it was these early stories that first earned her a
reputation as a writer with "the liveliest imagination and most delicate style of her
time." Influenced by Joyce, Proust and the theories of William James, Bergson and
Freud, she strove to write a new fiction that emphasized the continuous flow of
consciousness, time's passage as both a series of sequential moments and a longer flow of
years and centuries, and the essential indefinability of character. Readers can discover these and other aspects of her influential style in the eight stories collected here, among them a delightful, feminist put-down of the male intellect in "A Society" and a brilliant and sensitive portrayal of nature in "Kew Gardens." Also included are "An Unwritten Novel," "The String Quartet", "A Haunted House," "Blue & Green," "The Mark on the Wall" and the title story. In recent years, Woolf's fiction, feminism and high-minded sensibilities have earned her an ever-growing audience of readers. This splendid collection offers those readers not only the inestimable pleasures of the stories themselves, but an excellent entree into the larger body of Woolf's work. |
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"Jacob's Room (1922) comes as a
tremendous surprise. The impossible has occurred. The style closely resembles that of Kew
Gardens. The blobs of colour continue to drift past, but in their midst, interrupting
their course like a closely sealed jar, rises the solid figure of a young man. In what
sense Jacob is alive - in what sense any of Virginia Woolf's characters live - we have yet
to determine. But that he exists, that he stands as does a monument is certain, and
wherever he stands we recognize him for the same and are touched by his outline. The
coherence of the book is even more amazing than its beauty. In the stream of glittering
similes, unfinished sentences, hectic catalogues, unanchored proper names, we seem to be
going nowhere. Yet the goal comes, the method and the matter prove to have been one, and
looking back from the pathos of the closing scene we see for a moment the airy drifting
atoms piled into a colonnade. The break with Night and Day and even with The
Voyage Out is complete. A new type of fiction has swum into view . . ." -E. M. Forster Virginia Woolf (1882-1941), internationally acclaimed as a novelist, critic, and stylist, "pushed the light of the English language a little further against darkness" (E. M. Forster) |
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"Hers is indisputably
among the most sensitive of the minds and imaginations felicitously experimenting with the
English novel." Mrs. Dalloway is the portrait of a single day in a woman's life. Mrs. Clarissa Dalloway is preoccupied with the last-minute details of party preparation - fresh flower shopping, new dress buying, and festive room decorating. As she readies her house for friends and neighbors, memories flood her mind, and she is awash in the sensations of faraway times. Clarissa blissfully relives her carefree youth and early loves, stoically witnesses the approach and retreat of war's grinding realities, carefully reexamines the solid reasons behind her practical marriage, and hesitantly looks ahead to the unfamiliar work of growing old. In this revelatory and experimental novel, the past, the present, and visions of the future melt together in each and every moment. Heralded as Virginia Woolf's greatest work of fiction, Mrs. Dalloway is not only a detailed rendering of a vivid human life, it is the outline on paper of human consciousness. "Virginia Woolf is one of the few writers who changed life for all of us. Her combination of intellectual courage and painful emotional sensitivity created a new way of perceiving and living in the world." - Margaret Drabble VIRGINIA WOOLF (1882-1941), one of the major literary figures of the twentieth century, transformed the art of the novel with such ground-breaking works as Mrs. Dalloway and To the Lighthouse. The author of numerous collections of letters, journals, and short stories, she was an admired literary critic and a master of the essay form. Mrs. Dalloway was first published in 1925. MAUREEN HOWARD is the author of Natural History, Bridgeport Bus, and Facts of Life. |
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Woolf's first and most
popular volume of essays. This collection has more than twenty-five selections, including
such important statements as "Modern Fiction" and "The Modern Essay."
Edited and with an Introduction by Andrew McNeillie; Index. About the Author Virginia Woolf (1882-1941), one of the major literary figures of the twentieth century, transformed the art of the novel with such groundbreaking works as Mrs. Dalloway and To the Lighthouse. The author of numerous collections of letters, journals, and short stories, she was an admired literary critic and a master of the essay form. |
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"TO THE LIGHTHOUSE is one of the
greatest elegies in the English language, a book which trascends time." -Margaret Drabble The novel that established Virginia Woolf as a leading writer of the twentieth century, To the Lighthouse is made up of three powerfully charged visions into the life of one family living in a summer house off the rocky coast of Scotland. As time winds its way through their lives, the Ramseys face, alone and simultaneously, the greatest of human challenges and its greatest triumph - the human capacity for change. A moving portrait in miniature of family life, it also has profoundly universal implications, giving language to the silent space that separates people and the space that they transgress to reach each other. There are very few expectional and miraculous novels that have the power to change their readers forever. To the Lighthouse is one of them. "Without question one of the two or three finest novels
of the twentieth century. Woolf comments on the most pressing dramas of or human
predicament: war, mortality, family, love. If you're like me you'll come back to this book
often, always astounded, always moved, always refreshed." VIRGINIA WOOLF (1882-1941) transformed the art of the novel with groundbreaking works such as Mrs. Dalloway and To the Lighthouse. The author of numerous collections of letters, journals, and short stories, she was an admired literary critic and a master of the essay form. To the Lighthouse was first published in 1927. EUDORA WELTY is the highly celebrated author of many short stories and novels, among them The Golden Apples, Delta Wedding, and The Optimist's Daughter. |
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In 1928, way before everyone else was talking about gender-bending and way, way before the terrific movie with Tilda Swinton, Virginia Woolf wrote her comic masterpiece, a fantastic, fanciful love letter disguised as a biography, to Vita Sackville-West. Orlando enters the book as an Elizabethan nobleman and leaves the book three centuries and one change of gender later as a liberated woman of the 1920s. Along the way this most rambunctious of Woolf's characters engages in sword fights, trades barbs with 18th century wits, has a baby, and drives a car. This is a deliriously written, breathless-making book and a classic both of lesbian literature and the Western canon. | |
The landmark inquiry into women's role in
society. A ROOM OF ONE'S OWN is the political account of one of the twentieth century's
greatest thinkers. In A Room of One's Own, Virginia Woolf imagines that Shakespeare had a sister. A sister equal to Shakespeare in talent, and equal in genius, but whose legacy is radically different. This imaginary woman never writes a word and dies by her own hand, her genius unexpressed. If only she had found the means to create, argues Woolf, she would have reached the same heights as her immortal sibling. In this classic essay, Virginia Woolf takes on the establishment, using her gift of language to dissect the world around her and give voice to those who are without. Her message is a simple one: women must have a fixed income and a room of their own in order to have the freedom to create. "Woolf speaks with as much fancy as logic, as much wit as knowledge, and with the imagination of a true novelist." - The New York Times VIRGINIA WOOLF (1882-1941), one of the major literary figures of the twentieth century, transformed the art of the novel with such groundbreaking works as Mrs. Dalloway and To the Lighthouse. The author of numerous collections of letters, journals, and short stories, she was an admired literary critic and a master of the essay form. A Room of One's Own was first published in 1929. MARY GORDON is the author of Spending, The Company of Women, and Final Payments. |
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A work of haunting power and beauty, Virginia Woolf's magnificent 1931 novel, The Waves, is perhaps the most challenging and experimental work of her career. Told through the voices of six characters as they move from childhood to old age, The Waves is not only a fascinating experiment in narrative monologue but also a profound and emotionally resonant story about time's passing and the desire for harmony in the midst of life's chaos. | |
This story of Elizabeth Barrett Browning's
cocker spaniel, Flush, is one of the most unusual and pleasing of Virginia Woolf's books
and was the first of her only two creations in the biographical form. Although Flush has
adventures of his own with bullying black dogs, horrid maids, and the rough men who steal
him and almost starve him to death, he is also the means of providing the reader with
glimpses of the life of Elizabeth Barrett Browning - her days in Wimpole Street as an
invalid, her courtship by Robert Browning, their elopement, and their life together in
Italy. Written by Virginia Woolf in a spirit of release after the intensity of composing The Waves, Flush shows a kinship with the virtuosity and imagination of Orlando. It enchants right from the opening pages, in which the author pursues the history of the spaniel's name. "A masterpiece. . . . It is not fiction because it has
the substance, the reality of truth. It is not biography because it has the freedom, the
artistry, of fiction." "There are many passages of greater beauty in Mrs.
Woolf's other books, but Flush is more perfectly proportioned. . . . It amused
Mrs. Woolf to write and it has brought out her delightful humour as nothing else has ever
done." "A most triumphant trespassing of human imagination into
dog sensibilities. . . . The result is a book of irresistible grace and charm." |
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The Years is one of Virginia Woolf's
most ambitious and most beautifully written books. Its principal theme is Time, threading
together three generations of an upper-class English family, the Pargiters. The story
begins on a day in 1880 in the household of Colonel Abel Pargiter, his dying wife, and
their seven children, and it ends in the 1930s with a brilliantly depicted party at which
the Pargiters, young and old, pass in review, important events - births, deaths,
marriages, wars - occur in the wings; it is the commonplace moments that are captured here
in a sequence of perfectly drawn scenes. The large cast of characters come and go, meet,
talk, think, dream, grow older, in a continuous ritual of life that eludes meaning.
"Is there a pattern," asks the eldest Pargiter towards the end of this luminous
novel, "...a gigantic pattern, momentarily perceptible?" "Lovely as The Waves was, The Years goes far behind and beyond it....expressing Mrs. Woolf's purpose in the novel more richly than it has ever done before." -NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW "It would be impossible to over-praise the beauty of Mrs. Woolf's prose in The Years. There is, to my mind, an immense advance from the wild disjointed poetry of Orlando or Flush; a greater gravity, a ripeness and richness and warmth in the descriptive passages which she has achieved nowhere else and which marks her as the greatest living master of English....The Years is the finest novel she has ever written." -David Garnett, NEW STATESMAN & NATION "The finale...is inspired throughout - a brilliant fantasia of all Time's problems, age and youth, change and permanence, truth and illusion." -TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT |
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Virginia Woolf has received three separate
requests for a guinea - one for a women's college building fund, one for a society
promoting the employment of professional women, and one to help prevent war and to
"protect culture and intellectual liberty." The book is a threefold answer to
these requests, and as the author examines the three causes and points out that they are
inseparably the same, she declares a new tactic of feminine purpose. "Witty, scornful, deeply serious" -New Yorker "In Three Guineas [Virginia Woolf] has followed two streams of thought until they flow into the same sea; and that end, that goal, that finally encompassing wholeness is not merely peace, not merely freedom and equality for race and sex and people; it is human civilization, a civilization which must be better, sounder, surer than any we know. Toward so broad a purpose must we move if wars are to be prevented and the human mind and spirit are to stand erect and fearless in this world." -New York Times Virginia Woolf (1882-1941), internationally acclaimed as a novelist, critic, and stylist, "pushed the light of English language a little further against darkness" (E. M. Forster). |
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Roger Fry is Virginia
Woolf's only biography, which she undertook to commemorate a devoted friend and one of the
most renowned art critics of this century. She was, writes Herbert Read, his "perfect
biographer." Fry was a member of what Leonard Woolf called "the old Bloomsbury Group." Educated to be a scientist, he became passionately interested in art while still at Cambridge, despite the disapproval of his Quaker parents, and took up a career as a painter, critic, and lecturer. He was employed by J. P. Morgan to buy for his private collection, and he served for a time as Curator of Painting at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. In 1910 he introduced the British public to the work of the Post-Impressionist painters, from Cezanne to Picasso, at a history-making exhibition. Two years later he opened the famous Omega Workshop in London, whose fabrics, pottery, and furniture influenced design in England and the United States. In his later years, Fry was celebrated as a lecturer. E. M. Forster viewed his death, in 1934, as a loss to civilization. He had, indeed, shaped the aesthetic taste of an entire generation. "This book will doubtless remain the definitive comment on the
life and character of the English critic . . ." "To read this delectable Life of the art critic who
exercised more influence than any other since Ruskin at the summit of his fame is to
receive a mental image of beautiful hands deftly strewing cards face upward on a table and
tapering fingers pointing lightly now to this one and now that. The illusion doubtless
flows from the supple style . . . with which Virginia Woolf exposes to sight the events in
Roger Fry's active long career." |
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The definitive edition of Virginia Woolf's last and most lyrical work containing the original text she was working on at the time of her death. The story takes place at Pointz Hall, the country home of the Oliver family for 120 years, and revolves around the village pageant which aspires to present the entire history of England from the Middle Ages to the summer of 1939. The comic events on stage, the reactions of the villagers in the audience, the blend of past and present all affirm Virginia Woolf's belief in art as the unifying principle of life. | |
"The riches of the book are . . .
overwhelming. . . ." -Christian Science Monitor "Only
can Virginia Woolf convey with extraordinary intensity a particular act of sensual
perception; she is also one of the very rare prose writers whose general statements
immediately and intensely recreate in the mind of the reader the feeling stated." "Exquisitelly written . . ." ". . . up to the author's highest standard in a literary
form that was most congenial to her." ". . . will take its place with the two volumes of The
Common Reader. . . . There is warmth and wit in her writing, and at moments, as in
the shorter papers on Shelley and Coleridge, a rare, wondering tenderness towards great
men of whom she could not quite approve. . . ." "There is poetry in every line . . . beautiful quick
perceptions are thrown on objects that everyone can recognize." |
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Virginia Woolf's intention to publish her short stories is carried out in this volume, posthumously collected by her husband, Leonard Woolf. Containing six of eight stories from Monday or Tuesday, seven that appeared in magazines, and five other stories, the book makes available Virginia Woolf's shorter works of fiction. Foreword by Leonard Woolf. | |
"It would be hard to find...another modern
essayist who yields such constant pleasure....Virginia Woolf wrote as if she were
conversing with friends...her essays...are rare works of art, and establish one of the
most pleasurable of human relationships: warm kinship between civilized writer and
reader." -Time "All the characteristic excellences of Mrs. Woolf's writing appear in abundance in 'The Moment': the quick, darting intelligence; the urbane, social colloquialism of tone; the unparalleled ability to see and present a person, a book with entire freshness and naturalness." -Milton Crane, Chicago Sunday Tribune "...her essays...are lighter and easier than her
fiction, and they exude information and pleasure....Everything she writes about novelists,
like everything she writes about women, is fascinating....Her well-stocked, academic,
masculine mind is the ideal flint for the steel of her uncanny intuitions to strike
on." "...recalls to us that she was among the wittiest
writers of our time, with a wit which was all perception and never mere verbal
felicity." "Her prose is radiantly luminous. I doubt if any of her
contemporaries have written lovelier English than the best of Virginia Woolf. Some of her
best is contained in The Moment...." |
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An invaluable guide to the art and mind of Virginia Woolf, drawn by her husband from the personal record she kept over a period of twenty-seven years. Included are entries that refer to her own writing, others that are clearly writing exercises; accounts of people and scenes relevant to the raw material of her work; and comments on books she was reading. Edited and with a Preface by Leonard Woolf; Indices. | |
Moments of Being contains Virginia
Woolf's only autobiographical writing. In "Reminiscences," the first of five
pieces, she focuses on the death of her mother, "the greatest disaster that could
happen," and its effect on her father, the demanding Victorian patriarch. Three of
the papers were composed to be read to the Memoir Club, a postwar regrouping of
Bloomsbury, which exacted absolute candor of its members. "A Sketch of the Past" is the longest and most significant of the pieces, giving an account of Virginia Woolf's early years in the family household at 22 Hyde Park Gate. A recently discovered manuscript belonging to this memoir has provided material that further illuminates her relationship to her father, Leslie Stephen, who played a crucial role in her development as an individual and as a writer. "This is by far the most important book about Virginia
Woolf . . . that has appeared since her death." ". . . of fascinating importance, because they are
Virginia's only known autobiographical writings." "Especially in . . . 'A Sketch of the Past' . . . we
have, I think, the single most moving and beautiful thing that Virginia Woolf ever wrote
about her own life." |
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