Virginia Woolf (1882–1941)
Author of Mrs. Dalloway
About the Author
Virginia Woolf was born in London, England on January 25, 1882. She was the daughter of the prominent literary critic Leslie Stephen. Her early education was obtained at home through her parents and governesses. After death of her father in 1904, her family moved to Bloomsbury, where they formed show more the nucleus of the Bloomsbury Group, a circle of philosophers, writers, and artists. During her lifetime, she wrote both fiction and non-fiction works. Her novels included Jacob's Room, Mrs. Dalloway, To the Lighthouse, Orlando, and Between the Acts. Her non-fiction books included The Common Reader, A Room of One's Own, Three Guineas, The Captain's Death Bed and Other Essays, and The Death of the Moth and Other Essays. Having had periods of depression throughout her life and fearing a final mental breakdown from which she might not recover, Woolf drowned herself on March 28, 1941 at the age of 59. Her husband published part of her farewell letter to deny that she had taken her life because she could not face the terrible times of war. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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Series
Works by Virginia Woolf
Books and Portraits: Some Further Selections from the Literary and Biographical Writings (1977) 188 copies
Virginia Woolf Collection: Includes Her Greatest Works: Mrs. Dalloway, Orlando, to the Lighthouse, a Room of One's Own (2013) 29 copies
Profissões Para Mulheres e Outros Artigos Feministas. Pocket Plus (Em Portuguese do Brasil) (2012) 20 copies, 2 reviews
Schrijversdagboek 2 20 copies
Schrijversdagboek 1 18 copies
Dinamització d'activitats de temps lliure educatiu infantil i juvenil : manual de formació (2017) 7 copies
As Mulheres Devem Chorar Ou Se Unir Contra a Guerra. Patriarcado e Militarismo (Em Portugues do Brasil) (2019) 6 copies
The Virginia Woolf BBC Radio Drama Collection: Seven full-cast dramatisations (2019) 5 copies, 2 reviews
Greatest Short Stories by Women 5 copies
48 Ensaios 3 copies
Cinco relatos para mujeres 3 copies
O cameră doar a ei 3 copies
Robinson Crusoe [essay] 3 copies
Tutti i romanzi I : La crociera ; Notte e giorno ; La camera de Jacob ; La signora Dalloway (1994) 3 copies
Mrs. Dalloway (Annotated): Original 1925 Edition with Contemporary Biography of Virginia Woolf (1925) 3 copies
Collected Works of Virginia Woolf. Illustrated: Jacob's room. Monday or Tuesday. Mrs. Dalloway. To the Lighthouse. Orlando (2021) 3 copies
Jacob's Room [Annotated] 3 copies
Modern Fiction [essay] 3 copies
The History of Love 2 copies
LibriVox Ghost Story Collection 004 2 copies
Tutti i romanzi II : Gita la faro ; Orlando ; Le onde ; Gli anni ; Tra un atto e l'altro (-0001) 2 copies
Professions for Women 2 copies
To the Lighthouse / Orlando 2 copies
The Virginia Woolf Anthology (A Room of One's Own, Mrs Dalloway, To the Lighthouse, The Years etc) (2016) 2 copies
NATË E DITË 2 copies
Mrs Dalloway in Bond street & other stories= Mrs. Dalloway a Bond Streeten és más elbeszélések (2017) 2 copies
Notes on an Elizabethan Play [essay] 2 copies
Jane Austen [essay] 2 copies
The Russian Point of View [essay] 2 copies
Together and Apart [short story] 2 copies
A Summing Up [short story] 2 copies
Monday Of Tuesday 2 copies
Obras Completas (Vol. 1) 2 copies
The Bookclub-in-a-Box Discussion Guide to To The Lighthouse, the Novel by Virginia Woolf (Bookclub-In-A-Box) (2005) 2 copies
The Leaning Tower 2 copies
Romankunstens faser 2 copies
Mrs. Dalloway / Orlando 2 copies
Virginia Woolf Volume 2 1 copy
Virginia Woolf: The Complete Novels + A Room of One's Own (The Greatest Writers of All Time Book 17) 1 copy
Kew Gardens and Other Works by Virginia Woolf (Unexpurgated Edition) (Halcyon Classics) (2009) 1 copy
Escenas de una vida: matrimonio, amigos y escritura: Una selección de los diarios a cargo de Gonzalo Torné (CLAVE INTELECTUAL) (2021) 1 copy
Mrs. Dalloway'in Partisi 1 copy
Journal, tome 2 [1919-1922] 1 copy
Orlando 1 copy
Room of One's Own 1 copy
A Room of One's Own and The Common Reader: Virginia Woolf’s Finest Essays Together for the First Time (2025) 1 copy
The Love of Reading 1 copy
Mrs. Dalloway and Essays 1 copy
The Novels, Volume 3 1 copy
TRI MONEDHAT E ARIT 1 copy
Calatorie in larg 1 copy
L272 - Mrs. Dalloway 1 copy
Correspondance 1 copy
THE HOGARTH LETTERS 1 copy
L320 - Mrs Dalloway 1 copy
Virginia Woolf Archive 1 copy
NJË DHOME ME VETE 1 copy
NJOLLA NË MUR 1 copy
Souls, Ghosts and Vampires 1 copy
Jacobs Room 1 copy
Una stanza tutta per sé 1 copy
Mrs. Dallowy 1 copy
Lytton Strachey Letters 1 copy
SST 81 - Notte e giorno 1 copy
SST 78 - La crociera 1 copy
Rouva Dalloway 1 copy
Woolf Virginia 1 copy
La crociera. Ediz. integrale 1 copy
Mrs Dalloway & The Waves 1 copy
Old Bloomsbury [essay] 1 copy
The Common Reader [essay] 1 copy
Montaigne [essay] 1 copy
Defoe [essay] 1 copy
Addison [essay] 1 copy
Lives of the Obscure [essay] 1 copy
George Eliot [essay] 1 copy
Outlines [essay] 1 copy
The Modern Essay [essay] 1 copy
Joseph Conrad [essay] 1 copy
Two Parsons [essay] 1 copy
Jack Mytton [essay] 1 copy
Reminiscences [essay] 1 copy
Las Excentricas 1 copy
William Hazlitt [essay] 1 copy
Mrs. Dalloway - Manuscrito — Author — 1 copy
Rupert Brooke 1 copy
Hogarth sixpenny pamphlets 1 copy
Short Stories 1 copy
Four Figures [essay] 1 copy
Geraldine and Jane [essay] 1 copy
El momento: noche de verano 1 copy
"Mr Bennet and Mrs Brown" 1 copy
Al faro Orlando 1 copy
I classici Adelphi 1963-64 1 copy
Aurora Leigh [essay] 1 copy
Virginia Woolf. La Mort de la phalène : Nouvelles traduites de l'anglais par Hélène Bokanowski. Préface de Sylvère Lotringer (1968) 1 copy
The Niece of an Earl [essay] 1 copy
George Gissing [essay] 1 copy
Essais 1 copy
Virginia Woolf par elle meme 1 copy
Short fiction 1 copy
Artículos y reseñas 1 copy
Власна кімната 1 copy
Associated Works
Paradise Lost [Norton Critical Edition] (1667) — Contributor, some editions — 2,419 copies, 14 reviews
A Sentimental Journey Through France and Italy (1768) — Introduction, some editions — 1,955 copies, 27 reviews
Literature: An Introduction to Fiction, Poetry, and Drama (1995) — Contributor, some editions — 1,018 copies, 7 reviews
A Vindication of the Rights of Woman {Norton Critical Edition} (1975) — Contributor — 524 copies, 5 reviews
Chloe Plus Olivia: An Anthology of Lesbian Literature from the 17th Century to the Present (1994) — Contributor — 482 copies, 1 review
A Truth Universally Acknowledged: 33 Great Writers on Why We Read Jane Austen (2009) — Contributor — 412 copies, 18 reviews
Choice Cuts: A Savory Selection of Food Writing from Around the World and Throughout History (2002) — Contributor — 368 copies, 2 reviews
The Norton Anthology of English Literature, 4th Edition, Volume 2 (1979) — Contributor — 269 copies, 1 review
The Graphic Canon, Vol. 3: From Heart of Darkness to Hemingway to Infinite Jest (2013) — Contributor — 162 copies, 1 review
An American Album: One Hundred and Fifty Years of Harper's Magazine (2000) — Contributor — 146 copies, 1 review
Aspects of Alice: Lewis Carroll's Dream Child as Seen Through the Critics' Looking-glasses, 1865-1971 (1971) — Contributor — 124 copies, 3 reviews
Delphi Complete Works of Charles Dickens (Illustrated) (2012) — Contributor, some editions — 96 copies
Queer: A Collection of LGBTQ Writing from Ancient Times to Yesterday (2021) — Contributor, some editions — 64 copies
British Women Writers: An Anthology from the Fourteenth Century to the Present (1989) — Contributor — 61 copies, 1 review
Jo's Girls: Tomboy Tales of High Adventure, True Grit, and Real Life (1997) — Contributor — 48 copies
The Lifted Veil: The Book of Fantastic Literature by Women 1800-World War II (1806) — Contributor — 45 copies
Out of the Best Books: An Anthology of Literature, Vol. 1: The Individual and Human Values (1964) — Contributor — 40 copies
Ghostly Gentlewomen: Two Centuries of Spectral Stories by the Gentle Sex (1977) — Contributor — 26 copies
Gender in Modernism: New Geographies, Complex Intersections (2007) — Contributor — 12 copies, 1 review
The Spoken Word: British Writers, 3-CD Set (British Library - British Library Sound Archive) (2008) — Contributor — 11 copies
De mooiste verhalen van James Baldwin, John Berger, Jorge Luis Borges, Jane Bowles, Joseph Brodsky, Charles Bukowski, Wi (1990) — Contributor — 6 copies
Selections, Autobiographical and Imaginative, from the Works of George Gissing (1929) — Introduction — 5 copies
Die englische Literatur 09 in Text und Darstellung. 20. Jahrhundert. (2001) — Contributor — 3 copies
Recent Paintings By Vanessa Bell. Exhibition catalogue. — Foreword, some editions — 2 copies
Ein Haus mit vielen Zimmern: Autorinnen erzählen vom Schreiben (edition fünf 27) (German Edition) (2015) — Contributor — 2 copies
Ensayistas ingleses — Contributor — 2 copies
Modern Short Stories — Contributor — 2 copies
Librivox Ghost Story Collection 006 — Contributor — 2 copies
Neue Rundschau 1/80 — Author — 1 copy
Eight Modern Essayists (First Edition) — Contributor — 1 copy
Contemporary British Short Stories II. George Orwell, Dylan Thomas, D. H. Lawrence, Virginia Woolf, H. E. Bates. (1998) — Author — 1 copy
The Dial, Vol LXXVII No 6, December 1924 — Contributor, some editions — 1 copy
The London mercury — Contributor — 1 copy
Orlando (Robert Wilson) [Programmheft] — Author — 1 copy
50 seltsame Geschichten — Contributor — 1 copy
* De Provence Lege Artis: Verhalen uit het land van Van Gogh — Contributor — 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Stephen, Adeline Virginia (birth name)
- Other names
- Woolf, Adeline Virginia
- Birthdate
- 1882-01-25
- Date of death
- 1941-03-28
- Gender
- female
- Occupations
- novelist
essayist
publisher
critic - Organizations
- Bloomsbury Group
Memoir Club
Hogarth Press - Relationships
- Woolf, Leonard (husband)
Stephen, Thoby (brother)
Stephen, Adrian (brother)
Bell, Vanessa (sister)
Stephen, Leslie (father)
Bell, Clive (brother-in-law) (show all 22)
Garnett, Angelica (niece)
Bell, Julian (nephew)
Bell, Quentin (nephew)
Nicholson, Virginia (great-niece)
Sackville-West, Vita (intimate friend)
Stephen, James Fitzjames (uncle)
Garnett, Henrietta (great-niece)
Woolf, Cecil (nephew)
Ritchie, Anne Thackeray (step-aunt)
Morrell, Lady Ottoline (friend)
Strachey, Lytton (friend)
Keynes, John Maynard (friend)
Forster, E. M. (friend)
Lehmann, John (employee)
Grant, Duncan (friend)
Fry, Roger (friend) - Short biography
- Born 1882 in Kensington, London. Daughter of Sir Leslie Stephen and Julia Duckworth. Married Leonard Woolf. Committed suicide, aged 59.
- Cause of death
- suicide
- Nationality
- UK
- Birthplace
- Kensington, Middlesex, England, UK
- Places of residence
- London, Middlesex, England, UK
Rodmell, Sussex, England, UK
St. Ives, Cornwall, England, UK - Place of death
- Lewes, East Sussex, England, UK
- Burial location
- Rodmell, Sussex, England, UK
- Map Location
- England, UK
Members
Discussions
Virginia Woolf/Mrs. Dalloway in Someone explain it to me... (September 2024)
Folio Archives 350: To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf 1988 in Folio Society Devotees (November 2023)
Group Read - A Room of One's Own in Club Read 2023 (May 2023)
A Room of One's Own (2017) in Folio Society Devotees (September 2021)
Virginia Woolf: Jacob's Room in Author Theme Reads (June 2019)
Group Read, February 2016: The Voyage Out in 1001 Books to read before you die (February 2016)
***April Group Read: Orlando by Virginia Woolf in 2015 Category Challenge (April 2015)
February 2015: Virginia Woolf in Monthly Author Reads (March 2015)
Group Read, December 2014: Orlando in 1001 Books to read before you die (December 2014)
I've never read *******; where should I start? in Virago Modern Classics (January 2014)
May 2012: Virginia Woolf in Monthly Author Reads (August 2012)
Woolf: The Voyage Out in Author Theme Reads (February 2009)
Virginia Woolf: Mrs. Dalloway in Author Theme Reads (February 2009)
Reviews
One of Virginia Woolf's most creative and lighthearted books is Orlando, a stunning fusion of historical fiction, fantasy, and biography. The novel, which spans more than three centuries, centers on Orlando, a young aristocrat in Elizabethan England who, midway through the narrative, mysteriously changes into a woman and survives into the 20th century with little sign of aging. Woolf uses wit and poetic genius to explore themes of gender, identity, time, and the nature of art through this show more premise.
Orlando is a 16-year-old poet and courtier in Queen Elizabeth I's court at the start of the book. His travels, romantic relationships, and literary endeavors lead him to, in a fantastical turn of events, awaken as a woman in the eighteenth century. From there, Orlando struggles with the limitations placed on women, negotiates changing social roles, and develops as a writer. The story is presented as a parody of a biography, complete with a lighthearted narrator who offers commentary on both the story and the writing process. The fluidity of Orlando's identity and the passage of time are reflected in the book's structure.
Woolf explores the performative nature of gender roles and the fluidity of identity through Orlando's gender transformation. Orlando enjoys freedom and privilege as a man; as a woman, she encounters limitations but also learns new things. Woolf's examination of gender feels remarkably contemporary, questioning social norms and binary ideas. The novel also explores the elasticity of time, as Woolf uses Orlando's long life to make observations about historical shifts from Victorian repression to the modern era to Renaissance exuberance. show less
Orlando is a 16-year-old poet and courtier in Queen Elizabeth I's court at the start of the book. His travels, romantic relationships, and literary endeavors lead him to, in a fantastical turn of events, awaken as a woman in the eighteenth century. From there, Orlando struggles with the limitations placed on women, negotiates changing social roles, and develops as a writer. The story is presented as a parody of a biography, complete with a lighthearted narrator who offers commentary on both the story and the writing process. The fluidity of Orlando's identity and the passage of time are reflected in the book's structure.
Woolf explores the performative nature of gender roles and the fluidity of identity through Orlando's gender transformation. Orlando enjoys freedom and privilege as a man; as a woman, she encounters limitations but also learns new things. Woolf's examination of gender feels remarkably contemporary, questioning social norms and binary ideas. The novel also explores the elasticity of time, as Woolf uses Orlando's long life to make observations about historical shifts from Victorian repression to the modern era to Renaissance exuberance. show less
I read this as part of a college course with open discussions in the community. Adding in weekly forums with prompts and multiple lectures gave the experience an unexpected weight.
This wasn't my first Woolf novel, but I had no idea this one was so autobiographical for her. Knowing that we both lost our mothers at a similar age, the stark before and after in the novel made sense to me. All that happens in your life before and after a major loss are forever categorized that way in your own show more head. I'm sure Woolf felt that seismic shift in her world after he mother died.
Seeing the death and grief through the eyes of Mr. Ramsay, Lily, the children, gave a weight to how unique the grieving process is. Even when processing the same death, each person deals with it so differently. We can often let it shape who we become, even if it's unintentional.
"All of this danced up and down, like a company of gnats, each separate, but all marvelously controlled in an invisible elastic net—danced up and down in Lily’s mind, in and about the branches of the pear tree, where still hung in effigy the scrubbed kitchen table, symbol of her profound respect for Mr. Ramsay’s mind, until her thought which had spun quicker and quicker exploded of its own intensity; she felt released; a shot went off close at hand, and there came, flying from its fragments, frightened, effusive, tumultuous, a flock of starlings." show less
This wasn't my first Woolf novel, but I had no idea this one was so autobiographical for her. Knowing that we both lost our mothers at a similar age, the stark before and after in the novel made sense to me. All that happens in your life before and after a major loss are forever categorized that way in your own show more head. I'm sure Woolf felt that seismic shift in her world after he mother died.
Seeing the death and grief through the eyes of Mr. Ramsay, Lily, the children, gave a weight to how unique the grieving process is. Even when processing the same death, each person deals with it so differently. We can often let it shape who we become, even if it's unintentional.
"All of this danced up and down, like a company of gnats, each separate, but all marvelously controlled in an invisible elastic net—danced up and down in Lily’s mind, in and about the branches of the pear tree, where still hung in effigy the scrubbed kitchen table, symbol of her profound respect for Mr. Ramsay’s mind, until her thought which had spun quicker and quicker exploded of its own intensity; she felt released; a shot went off close at hand, and there came, flying from its fragments, frightened, effusive, tumultuous, a flock of starlings." show less
Virginia Woolf can do anything she wants, and she does. This book breaks rules, and the fourth and fifth wall, and dances between forms and genres. Woolf reinvents the novel. Along the way, she writes more clearly and directly about feminism and identity than anyone else has, before or since--a remarkable feat for 1928. This book gobsmacked me, over and over. It hold brilliant secrets for any reader of any era. Everyone should read this.
Such a delightfully whimsical tale of a dog's life! Virginia Woolf, a dog owner herself, relates the biography of Flush, Elizabeth Barrett Browning's spaniel. Through the dog's eyes, we experience Browning's life of confinement in a genteel Victorian household, a confinement that, though luxurious, threatens to enervate her. While there is no denying the claustrophobic atmosphere, Woolf wisely contrasts Browning's suffering with that of the Whitechapel poor who kidnap Flush and hold him for show more ransom. From Flush's viewpoint, we experience the searing difference between drinking water from a purple glass jar and drinking water from a slime coated bucket. We then experience the sudden freedom he is granted when the Browning's escape to Florence. He rejoices in running free in the streets and sunning himself on the warm tile floor and a ready parallel can be drawn between Flush's experiences and those of his mistress. show less
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el (4)
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Awards
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Statistics
- Works
- 645
- Also by
- 140
- Members
- 118,541
- Popularity
- #67
- Rating
- 4.1
- Reviews
- 1,736
- ISBNs
- 3,776
- Languages
- 37
- Favorited
- 660















































































































