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Virginia Woolf (1882–1941)

Author of Mrs. Dalloway

652+ Works 119,231 Members 1,746 Reviews 660 Favorited

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
Image credit: Wikipedia

Series

Works by Virginia Woolf

Mrs. Dalloway (1925) 23,323 copies, 379 reviews
To the Lighthouse (1927) — some editions — 20,354 copies, 312 reviews
A Room of One's Own (1929) 14,139 copies, 204 reviews
Orlando: A Biography (1928) 12,438 copies, 204 reviews
The Waves (1931) 6,344 copies, 85 reviews
The Voyage Out (1915) 3,011 copies, 45 reviews
Jacob's Room (1922) 2,668 copies, 39 reviews
Between the Acts (1941) 2,264 copies, 29 reviews
Night and Day (1919) 2,182 copies, 28 reviews
The Years (1937) 1,810 copies, 31 reviews
Flush: A Biography (1933) 1,672 copies, 43 reviews
Three Guineas (1938) 1,645 copies, 19 reviews
A Writer's Diary (1953) 1,423 copies, 15 reviews
A Room of One's Own / Three Guineas (1929) 1,270 copies, 13 reviews
Moments of Being (1976) 1,248 copies, 13 reviews
The Common Reader: First Series (1925) 1,201 copies, 10 reviews
Mrs. Dalloway (Annotated) (1993) 1,029 copies, 14 reviews
To the Lighthouse (annotated) (2000) 808 copies, 8 reviews
A Haunted House and Other Short Stories (1944) — Author — 703 copies, 4 reviews
The Common Reader: Second Series (1932) 659 copies, 5 reviews
Monday or Tuesday: Eight Stories (1921) 584 copies, 16 reviews
Mrs. Dalloway / The Waves (1925) 567 copies, 1 review
The London Scene: Six Essays on London Life (1982) 514 copies, 12 reviews
The Mrs Dalloway Reader (2003) 440 copies, 4 reviews
The Death of the Moth and Other Essays (1942) 403 copies, 5 reviews
A Room of One’s Own [Ultra Lined Journal] (2014) 392 copies, 3 reviews
Women and Writing (1979) 386 copies, 1 review
On Being Ill (1926) 300 copies, 6 reviews
Mrs. Dalloway's Party : A Short Story Sequence (1973) — Author — 299 copies, 3 reviews
Jacob's Room & The Waves: Two complete novels (1960) 276 copies, 2 reviews
Jacob's Room (Norton Critical Editions) (2007) 276 copies, 9 reviews
Street Haunting (2005) 232 copies, 2 reviews
Freshwater: A Comedy (1976) 221 copies, 2 reviews
The Virginia Woolf Reader (1984) 205 copies, 3 reviews
Roger Fry: A Biography (1976) 201 copies, 2 reviews
Carlyle's House and Other Sketches (2003) 170 copies, 3 reviews
Melymbrosia: A Novel (1982) 168 copies, 4 reviews
The Years {annotated} (2008) 167 copies, 2 reviews
Killing the Angel in the House (1995) 164 copies, 3 reviews
The Moment and Other Essays (1947) 162 copies
The Complete Works of Virginia Woolf (2018) 157 copies, 1 review
A Moment's Liberty: The Shorter Diary (1990) 157 copies, 1 review
The Essays of Virginia Woolf : Volume 1, 1904-1912 (1986) — Author — 154 copies, 2 reviews
Granite and Rainbow : Essays (1958) 151 copies, 2 reviews
Selected Essays (2008) 147 copies, 1 review
A Haunted House [short story] (1921) 145 copies, 11 reviews
Kew Gardens [short story] (1919) 139 copies, 13 reviews
Selected Short Stories (1993) 137 copies, 3 reviews
Nurse Lugton's Curtain (1991) 136 copies, 1 review
Genius and Ink: Virginia Woolf on How to Read (2019) 135 copies, 3 reviews
How to Read a Book and Other Essays (1922) 131 copies, 6 reviews
A Room of One's Own / The Voyage Out (2012) — Author — 103 copies, 1 review
The Widow and the Parrot (1988) 103 copies, 4 reviews
Travels with Virginia Woolf (1993) 102 copies
The Lady in the Looking-Glass [short story] (1978) 98 copies, 5 reviews
Liberty (Vintage Minis) (2017) 79 copies, 1 review
Mrs. Dalloway (Norton Critical Edition) (2021) 72 copies, 1 review
Selected Diaries (2008) 66 copies
Great Writers Series: Virginia Woolf (1994) 62 copies, 1 review
Between the Acts / The Years (2012) 61 copies, 1 review
The Collected Essays (1967) 55 copies, 1 review
A Room of One's Own and Other Essays (1994) 53 copies, 1 review
Essays on the Self (2017) 51 copies, 1 review
The Life of Violet: Three Early Stories (2025) 50 copies, 1 review
Time Passes (2007) 48 copies, 1 review
The Charleston Bulletin Supplements (2013) 46 copies, 2 reviews
A letter to a young poet (1996) 40 copies
A Woman's Essays (1992) 40 copies, 1 review
Complete Diary: 1915-1941 (2008) 39 copies
Oh, to Be a Painter! (ekphrasis) (2021) 38 copies, 1 review
Hours in a Library and Other Essays (2005) 35 copies, 1 review
Memoirs of a Novelist (2006) 34 copies, 1 review
Collected Essays, Volume 1 (1966) 34 copies
Am I a Snob? [essay] (2012) 31 copies, 1 review
Collected Essays, Volume 2 (1966) 31 copies
Collected Essays, Volume 4 (1967) 29 copies
The New Dress (Penguin Archive) (2025) 29 copies, 1 review
The Mark on the Wall [short story] (1917) 29 copies, 1 review
The Crowded Dance of Modern Life (1993) 28 copies, 1 review
Collected Essays, Volume 3 (1967) 26 copies
The Illustrated Letters of Virginia Woolf (2017) — Author — 26 copies
Two Stories [2017 edition] (2017) 25 copies
The Waves {annotated} (1931) 24 copies
Lappin and Lappinova [short story] (1992) 22 copies, 1 review
Novels and Short Stories (1993) 21 copies, 2 reviews
Cuentos completos (1900) 20 copies
Reviewing (1977) 17 copies
The False Novel (2000) 16 copies
The Art of the Novel (1963) 16 copies
Classic Women's Short Stories (2001) 14 copies, 1 review
The New Dress [short story] (1996) 14 copies, 2 reviews
The Legacy [short story] (2017) 13 copies, 2 reviews
The Short Stories of Virginia Woolf (2012) 13 copies, 1 review
Women (2011) 13 copies
A Room of One's Own and To The Lighthouse (2009) 12 copies, 1 review
Rêves de femmes: Six nouvelles (2018) 12 copies, 1 review
On Fiction (2011) 10 copies
Walter Sickert: A Conversation (1977) 10 copies, 1 review
Eseje wybrane (2015) 10 copies
The Death of the Moth (1980) 9 copies
Virginia Woolf by Herself (2004) 9 copies
Liefst schepsel (2025) 9 copies, 1 review
Diaris (2022) 9 copies
Beau Brummell (1977) 8 copies
Shakespeare's Sister (2007) 7 copies
Essais choisis (2015) 7 copies
The String Quartet [short story] (2017) 7 copies, 2 reviews
Romans, essais (2014) 7 copies, 1 review
Lectures intimes (2013) 7 copies
The Narrow Bridge of Art (1986) 7 copies, 1 review
A Arte do Romance (Em Portugues do Brasil) (2019) 6 copies, 2 reviews
MATAR AL ANGEL DEL HOGAR (1929) 6 copies
Spre Far - Orlando (2009) 5 copies
CORRESPONDENCIA ERÓTICA (2023) 5 copies, 1 review
An Unwritten Novel (1920) 5 copies
Dos relats: 1 (Menuts) (2021) 5 copies
Personligt (2016) 5 copies
Ensaios Escolhidos (2014) 5 copies
Tutti i racconti (1993) 5 copies
Böcker (2014) 5 copies
Solid Objects [short story] (2012) 5 copies, 1 review
Essays (1997) 5 copies
Four Hidden Letters (2007) 5 copies
Virginia Wolf (2023) 4 copies
Journal (1983) 4 copies
Byrackan (2019) 4 copies
ESCRITOS SOBRE ARTE (2022) 4 copies
Virginia Woolf (2023) 4 copies
ENSAIOS SELETOS (2024) 4 copies
"GIARDINI" (2021) 4 copies, 2 reviews
Viagens (2018) 4 copies
Relatos completos (2018) 4 copies
The Joke of the Battleship, The Society (1999) — Author — 4 copies
In the Orchard (2024) 3 copies
Cuadros y retratos (2022) 3 copies
48 Ensaios 3 copies
Fire britiske klassikere (2018) 3 copies
Una societat (2023) 3 copies
Författarlivet (2018) 3 copies
Sul cinema (2012) 3 copies
ESCRITORAS (EL BARQUERO) (2017) 3 copies
Cartes d'amor (2025) 3 copies
Over ziek zijn (2024) 3 copies
Three Guineas (Annotated) (1689) 3 copies
A Society [short story] (1921) 3 copies, 1 review
22 Hyde Park Gate [essay] (2015) 3 copies
The Novels, Volume 1 (2012) 2 copies
NATË E DITË 2 copies
Dnevnik spisateljice (2024) 2 copies
Diario de escritora (2025) 2 copies
Etre femme (2022) 2 copies
Scritti Sull'Arte (2022) 2 copies
Journal. Tome 1 (1981) 2 copies
Montaigne, Âme Libre (2019) 2 copies
Leggere a caso (2016) 2 copies
Virginia Woolf - Caixa (2018) 2 copies
Jacobs Room 1 copy
ELLOS (2018) 1 copy
Une esquisse du passé (2025) 1 copy
O diário de Asheham (2024) 1 copy
Lettres (1993) 1 copy
Orlando 1 copy
Cuentos completos de Virginia Woolf (2022) 1 copy, 1 review
Pisma Viti (2008) 1 copy
Cuentos escogidos (2022) 1 copy
Opere (1998) 1 copy
Mrs. Dallowy 1 copy
La vida de Violet 1 copy, 1 review
Mrs Dolloway 1 copy
Lastna soba 1 copy
Mrs. Dalloway - Manuscrito — Author — 1 copy
Selected Essays (1999) 1 copy
Fantasmagorias (2016) 1 copy
Le Paradis est une lecture continue (2019) 1 copy, 1 review
Das grosse Lesebuch (2005) 1 copy
Essays (1986) 1 copy
Samlade noveller (2014) 1 copy
Spre far. Orlando (2010) 1 copy
On the Mediterranean (1995) 1 copy
Essais 1 copy
I racconti (2000) 1 copy
Ricordi (1996) 1 copy

Associated Works

Pride and Prejudice (1813) — some editions — 94,315 copies, 1,511 reviews
Jane Eyre (1847) — Introduction, some editions — 68,147 copies, 1,019 reviews
Wuthering Heights (1847) — Afterword, some editions — 62,324 copies, 813 reviews
Sense and Sensibility (1811) — some editions — 44,211 copies, 578 reviews
Robinson Crusoe (1719) — Introduction, some editions — 29,102 copies, 362 reviews
Middlemarch (1872) — Préface, some editions — 20,817 copies, 369 reviews
The Vicar of Wakefield (1766) — Afterword, some editions — 3,511 copies, 63 reviews
Paradise Lost [Norton Critical Edition] (1667) — Contributor, some editions — 2,434 copies, 14 reviews
A Sentimental Journey Through France and Italy (1768) — Introduction, some editions — 1,970 copies, 28 reviews
The Waste Land (Norton Critical Editions) (2000) — Contributor — 1,731 copies, 12 reviews
The Garden Party (Collection) (1922) — Foreword, some editions — 1,686 copies, 49 reviews
The Norton Anthology of Short Fiction (1978) — Author, some editions — 1,591 copies, 4 reviews
The Art of the Personal Essay (1994) — Contributor — 1,522 copies, 11 reviews
50 Great Short Stories (1952) — Contributor — 1,484 copies, 11 reviews
Literature: An Introduction to Fiction, Poetry, and Drama (1995) — Contributor, some editions — 1,025 copies, 7 reviews
A Vindication of the Rights of Woman {Norton Critical Edition} (1975) — Contributor — 526 copies, 5 reviews
The Penguin Book of English Short Stories (1967) — Contributor — 470 copies, 4 reviews
The Norton Book of Women's Lives (1993) — Contributor — 443 copies, 1 review
Women & Fiction: Short Stories By and About Women (1975) — Contributor — 394 copies, 7 reviews
The Essential Feminist Reader (2007) — Contributor — 377 copies, 3 reviews
Literature: The Human Experience (2006) — Contributor — 369 copies
A Treasury of Short Stories (1947) — Contributor — 334 copies
The World's Greatest Short Stories (2006) — Contributor — 327 copies, 2 reviews
The Penguin Book of Lesbian Short Stories (1993) — Contributor — 326 copies, 2 reviews
The Mammoth Book of Haunted House Stories (2000) — Contributor — 317 copies, 9 reviews
The Norton Anthology of English Literature, 4th Edition, Volume 2 (1979) — Contributor — 271 copies, 1 review
Criticism: Major Statements (1964) — Contributor — 235 copies
The Oxford Book of English Short Stories (1998) — Contributor — 232 copies, 2 reviews
Love Letters (1996) — Contributor — 224 copies, 1 review
Erotica: Women's Writing from Sappho to Margaret Atwood (1990) — Contributor — 183 copies
100 Eternal Masterpieces of Literature, Volume 1 (2017) — Contributor — 179 copies
Aurora Leigh [Norton Critical Edition] (1996) — Contributor — 176 copies
Stories of the Supernatural (1891) — Introduction, some editions — 171 copies, 3 reviews
Murder & Other Acts of Literature (1997) — Contributor — 158 copies, 2 reviews
Pride and Prejudice [Norton Critical Edition, 4th ed.] (2016) — Contributor — 152 copies
The Norton Book of Personal Essays (1997) — Contributor — 151 copies, 1 review
An American Album: One Hundred and Fifty Years of Harper's Magazine (2000) — Contributor — 146 copies, 1 review
Read With Me (1965) — Contributor — 145 copies, 2 reviews
The Second Penguin Book of English Short Stories (1972) — Contributor, some editions — 135 copies
Best Dog Stories (1990) — Contributor — 132 copies, 2 reviews
Eight Modern Essayists (Second Edition) (1965) — Contributor — 126 copies, 1 review
Reading I've Liked (1941) — Contributor — 124 copies, 1 review
The Penguin Book of Women's Humour (1996) — Contributor — 124 copies
Magical Realist Fiction: An Anthology (1984) — Contributor — 119 copies, 1 review
Orlando [1992 film] (1992) — Original novel — 116 copies, 4 reviews
Great Modern Reading (1943) — Contributor — 115 copies, 3 reviews
Delphi Complete Works of Charles Dickens (Illustrated) (2012) — Contributor, some editions — 96 copies
Great Short Stories of the Masters (1995) — Contributor — 94 copies, 1 review
The Treasury of English Short Stories (1985) — Contributor — 91 copies
The Treasury of the Fantastic (2001) — Contributor — 89 copies, 3 reviews
Into the London Fog: Eerie Tales from the Weird City (2020) — Contributor — 86 copies, 3 reviews
Traveller's Library (1933) — Contributor; Author; Contributor — 79 copies, 1 review
Modern English Short Stories, Second Series (1911) — Contributor — 70 copies, 1 review
The Gender of Modernism: A Critical Anthology (1990) — Contributor — 69 copies, 1 review
Queer: A Collection of LGBTQ Writing from Ancient Times to Yesterday (2021) — Contributor, some editions — 65 copies
Victorian Photographs of Famous Men and Fair Women (1973) — Introduction — 65 copies
Modern English Readings (1942) — Contributor — 60 copies
Medusa's Daughters (2020) — Contributor — 57 copies
Strangeness (1977) — Contributor — 57 copies
Masters of the Modern Short Story (1945) — Contributor — 53 copies
The Virago Book of Christmas (2002) — Contributor — 51 copies, 1 review
The Faber Book of Christmas (1996) — Contributor — 49 copies, 1 review
Writing Politics: An Anthology (2020) — Contributor — 46 copies
An Omnibus of 20th Century Ghost Stories (1989) — Contributor — 45 copies
Sophocles: A Collection of Critical Essays (1966) — Contributor — 44 copies
The Oxford Book of English Love Stories (1996) — Contributor — 41 copies
Famous and Curious Animal Stories (1982) — Contributor — 36 copies, 2 reviews
Mrs Dalloway [1997 film] (1997) — Original novel — 35 copies, 2 reviews
Stories To Get You Through The Night (2010) — Contributor — 34 copies
The Secret Self: A Century of Short Stories by Women (1995) — Contributor — 33 copies
Women on Nature (2021) — Contributor — 31 copies
Sail Away: Stories of Escaping to Sea (2001) — Contributor — 28 copies
A Book of Essays (1963) — Contributor — 28 copies
One World of Literature (1992) — Contributor — 27 copies
Journal of a Somerset Rector, 1803-1834 (1971) — Contributor, some editions — 23 copies, 1 review
Studies in Fiction (1965) — Contributor — 23 copies, 1 review
Classic Essays in English (1961) — Contributor — 23 copies
Masters of British Literature, Volume B (2007) — Contributor — 22 copies
Encounters: Essays for Exploration and Inquiry (1999) — Contributor — 19 copies
The Analog Sea Review: Number Three (2020) — Contributor — 18 copies
Great Classic Stories II: Eighteen Unabridged Classics (2010) — Contributor — 17 copies
Classic Dog Stories [Macmillan Collector's Library] (2020) — Contributor — 15 copies
Witches' Brew: Horror and Supernatural Stories by Women (1984) — Contributor — 14 copies
Great Short Stories from the World's Literature (1950) — Contributor — 13 copies
31 Stories (1960) — Contributor — 13 copies, 2 reviews
Gender in Modernism: New Geographies, Complex Intersections (2007) — Contributor — 12 copies, 1 review
The London Omnibus (1932) — Contributor — 11 copies
England forteller : britiske og irske noveller (1970) — Contributor — 10 copies
Best of Women's Short Stories, Volume 2 (2006) — Contributor — 9 copies
The New Windmill Book of Stories from Different Genres (1998) — Contributor — 8 copies
British and American Essays, 1905-1956 (1959) — Contributor — 7 copies
Favourite Sea Stories from Seaside Al (1996) — Contributor — 7 copies
Classic Women's Literature (2001) — Contributor — 5 copies
Three Worlds: Music from Woolf Works (2017) — Narrator — 4 copies
Pages de journal (1929-1932) (1934) — Binder, some editions — 4 copies
Eight Modern Essayists (Sixth Edition) (2007) — Contributor — 3 copies
Recent Paintings By Vanessa Bell. Exhibition catalogue. — Foreword, some editions — 2 copies
Ensayistas ingleses — Contributor — 2 copies
Virginia's Sisters: An anthology of women's writing (2023) — Contributor — 2 copies
Enjoying Stories (1987) — Contributor — 2 copies
Modern Short Stories — Contributor — 2 copies
Librivox Ghost Story Collection 006 — Contributor — 2 copies
London Unplugged (2021) — original short story, segment "Kew Gardens" — 2 copies
Neue Rundschau 1/80 — Author — 1 copy
Pride and Prejudice [Giant Courage Classics] (1999) — Contributor — 1 copy
Eight Modern Essayists (First Edition) — Contributor — 1 copy
The Dial, Vol LXXVII No 6, December 1924 — Contributor, some editions — 1 copy
Royal Ballet : Woolf Works : 2022/23 [programme] (2023) — Contributor — 1 copy
The London mercury — Contributor — 1 copy
Country Living Magazine Christmas Stories (1995) — Contributor — 1 copy
50 seltsame Geschichten — Contributor — 1 copy
Life and Letters Volume III No. 16. September 1929 (1928) — Contributor — 1 copy
Waseda Literature Special Issue: Women's Edition (2017) — Contributor — 1 copy

Tagged

20th century (2,174) biography (632) Bloomsbury (1,184) British (1,588) British literature (1,581) classic (1,539) classics (2,121) diary (617) England (896) English (715) English literature (1,639) essays (2,008) feminism (1,621) fiction (9,885) letters (446) literary criticism (483) literature (2,646) modernism (1,566) non-fiction (1,956) novel (2,286) own (456) read (1,110) short stories (437) stream of consciousness (591) to-read (5,691) unread (643) Virginia Woolf (1,828) women (806) Woolf (956) writing (449)

Common Knowledge

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

1,889 reviews
A lot of mysteriously evasive stuff. Playful too. This collection of eight stories from 1921 was important to me because of the window we get from an author who had only yet published two somewhat conventional novels. Nothing here is conventional. Lines require different mindsets, hard to find mindsets. Sometimes it’s oddly very beautiful. Often, it’s super-insecure.

lines like this: "Yet, the moment after, if the door was opened, spread about the floor, hung upon the walls, pendant from show more the ceiling--what?" It takes a moment to realize "the moment after" is the subject of the sentence, rather than simply a time descriptor. Which is elegant, but where does one store the meaning of the sentence in your mind?

There are many aspects of the stories like this. Although usually the point of the story becomes clear, it can leave an almost mystical feeling, trying to understand the full texture of the story, the way, for example, the ghostly couple exist in the opening story, holding hands, making noises. Are they real? Is this Woolf's deceased parents? Am I thinking the right mindset? Am I close? That whole mindset has a religious or spiritual tone to it. ... I mean, I think it does.

I don't know that these stories will stick, that they or can as they can be so elusive. Well, other than that ghostly couple who come to mind as soon as I think about the title. But the nature of the mindset here will be something I carry over, as venture on to the next Woolf novel, [Jacob's Room], one that is apparently very difficult.

2026
https://www.librarything.com/topic/384249#9194944
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Review of title story In a couple of pages, Virginia Woolf summons Schrodinger's ghost story: both the antithesis and apotheosis of the genre. The unspecified, slippery sense of things not being quite right, not easily explicable, works regardless of your belief, or lack of, in ghosts or gods.

It opens by addressing “you”:
Whatever hour you woke there was a door shutting.
A little later:
But it wasn't that you woke us.

I loved the imagery, ambiguity, deliberately odd language show more (fluid tenses, vague pronouns), opacity despite all the glass, poetic phrasing, and a candle that seems more dead than alive (it “burns stiff and still).

There are no white sheets, clattering chains, or “whoooooo”.
Our eyes darken, we hear no steps beside us; we see no lady spread her ghostly cloak.
Just impressions amid minds clouded by… who knows what?

Real or dream, and what does it mean?

Image: A dead rose and its reflection. “The windowpanes reflected apples, reflected roses; all the leaves were green in the glass.” (Source)

“For now we see through a glass, darkly; but then face to face: now I know in part; but then shall I know even as also I am known.” 1 Corinthians 13:12, King James Version

Quotes

• “The trees spun darkness for a wandering beam of sun.”

• “The wind roars up the avenue. Trees stoop and bend this way and that. Moonbeams splash and spill wildly in the rain.”

• “Death was the glass; death was between us.”

• “The wind drives straightly; the flame stoops slightly. Wild beams of moonlight cross both floor and wall.”

See also

• “‘Safe, safe, safe,’ the pulse of the house beat gladly.
Very different from the heart that beats in the house in Poe’s The Tell-Tale Heart, which I reviewed HERE - although that is also addressed to “you”.

• Julio Cortázar's short story, House Taken Over, which I reviewed HERE.

Short story club

I read this as one of the stories in The Art of the Short Story, by Dana Gioia, from which I'm aiming to read one story a week with The Short Story Club, starting 2 May 2022.

You can read this story here.

You can join the group here.
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Published in 1929, the titular essay starts out as a lecture on the relationship between women and writing fiction. It is creative and thought-provoking, and not what one would expect an essay to be (at least I didn’t expect it). Woolf writes as other characters, such as Mary Seton or Mary Carmichael, but this is very much a work of non-fiction that addresses the reasons it was so difficult in the past for women to write fiction, including societal mores of earlier eras when women had show more limited (or no) access to funds, education, or private time. She lauds the accomplishment of early women fiction writers such as Jane Austen, George Eliot, and the Brontë sisters.

She takes issue with the men of her own and earlier times who wrote about women. She analyzes several of their works and find that they primarily portray women in limited roles in support of men. Some of these works make outlandish statements that refer to the lesser status of women in the traits such as morality and mental abilities. It made me very glad I did not live back then. While there are still issues in present day, it is certainly nothing like what women of the 19th century (and earlier) had to face. For example, it was acceptable for a husband to beat his wife, and women could not own property. Woolf’s style of expression is unique and creative. I found an edition of this work that included the titular essay (5 stars) and five short stories (4 stars), one of which, my favorite of the bunch, even mentions Clarissa Dalloway.
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Virgina Woolf's first novel has a few surprises for me. For starters, it doesn't feel Modernist, but more like a traditional novel. It's full of intellectual elements, and games, with literary titles popping up in more and less serious ways. And it has some kind of spiritual whole to it. The title is a perfect one for such a ground-breaking first novel, and it's plot-relevant. And it has an odd humor to it. And some very dark elements.

We follow the strange Rachel Vinrace, a sheltered show more 24-year-old woman raised by her aunts who hasn't done a lot of things. She is obsessed with music and a great piano player. But she hasn't had a romantic relationship. She hasn't formulated her ideas. Humanity is still a great curiosity to her. She's very open to other people's ideas but responds with uninformed sort-of gut responses that may be original or quirky but don't always seem to make much sense. And when things aren't working for her, she returns to the music. This gives her a sort of counter-to-convention mind.

A novel of characters, we see Rachel through many different eyes. Within the book she will travel via her dad's company ship on the voyage out from London to Brazil, with a small group that gain boarding, including Rachel's aunt and uncle, and notably, briefly but prominently, Richard and Clarissa Dalloway. Then she will stay in fictional Santa Marina, Brazil, near a hotel full of English travelers. Latinos and natives are hidden in the background. This is basically an isolated community of well-to-do English adults - married and single, young and older. And they all have some sort of response to Rachel.

These characters may be intelligent and intellectual, or not, but they are all far more conventional than Rachel. So, in a way, they can't see her. One stunning character is Helen Ambrose, based on Woolf's deceased mother, who is Rachel's aunt and tries to play a mothering role. Another prominent character is Terrence Hewet, an intellectually minded wealthy bachelor with a lifetime income, who is also lazy and charming and writing a book he never actually writes. He will find Rachel irresistible and eventually become engaged to her. But there is a dark humor in the clash between his well-meaning, conventional, if young and idealistic, perspective and Rachel's unconventional mind.

There are several mysterious and dark elements of the book, which plays on the exotic locality either onboard the boat, or in Brazil. Rachel's dreams are eerie and striking. There is a sort of heart-of-darkness moment, which is also an engagement scene laying a gentle critique on the concept of marriage.

There are several feminist elements in here, and mostly they come across as a criticism of marriage. Engagement does not make people happy but instead stresses them out and darkens their outlook! Marriages are typically a mess hidden under the covers of convention. Helen is worldly, but her husband Ridley is lost in his office in his academic literary study, translating the ancient Greek poet, Pindar, famous for his odes to obscure Greek Olympian winners. And I cannot overlook Evelyn Murgatroyd, a young, comically and fiercely independent personality, compared to Napoleon, who welcomes and spurns marriage proposals. The illegitimate daughter of a servant, she storms through the book, placing herself in people's way, demanding understanding, needing affectionate attention. She needs men to propose to her, and she need's to reject them. They're simply too small for her character. Altogether, marriage here seems like a terribly dangerous thing.

The book is playfully literary throughout, giving a strong intellectual undertone. We note Rachel hates Jane Austen and Gibbon. But everyone has something literary going on. Ridley Ambrose's Pindar. St. John Hirst, another bachelor based on Lytton Strachey, is incredibly erudite, and socially awkward, especially with woman. He demands Rachel read Gibbon so he can evaluate her intellect! I do love that he reads [[Swinburne]]'s Sapphics during church. But all the characters, even the less scholarly, have literature on the their mind. Even a member of the ship's crew tells Helen of his love for Shakespeare's [Henry V].

And, since I'm already going on way too long, I want to say something about the pace, especially early on. It's not a fast-moving book. But when we are onboard the ship, floating, going seemingly nowhere, constrained by surrounding water, forcing everyone to interact, however awkwardly, it struck me both how mysterious it is, and how [[William Faulkner]] would play with similar themes. Faulkner's second novel, [Mosquitos], is a boat trip in the Louisiana swamps where the boat goes aground and everyone is stuck. Like this novel, his novel is full of conventional and very literary characters and a very impressionable young woman. His characters are more outrageous, and his heroine way more sexualized, but that pace, still, with confined, forced clashes of interaction, ties into the same elements here. Layering that with the maybe [Heart of Darkness] moment, we might have a little Conrad-Woolf-Faulkner literary train, although it probably only exists in my mind.

It's awkward to try to analyze Woolf as her work is so complex, and there is so much serious stuff out on her. It feels like mistakes might strike sparks and spontaneously combust off the screen. But, under that warning, I found that overall the book makes for and ponders a sort of clash, on different levels, between intellectual and rawer humanity, and in that way provides a gentle critique on conventional English cultural norms. Christianity, academia, unfair finances, sexual attraction and marriage all come under some criticism. And the impossibility of communication, of reaching Rachel, seems to provide another, counter theme. The deeper and surficial minds at play.

2026
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Quentin Bell Contributor, Foreword, Introduction
Leonard Woolf Foreword, Editor
Francine Prose Introduction, Editor
Eleanor Mcnees Annotation and Introduction
Jan Morris Editor
Kate Mosse Foreword
Denise Bottmann Translator
Hermione Lee Foreword, Introduction
Andrew McNeillie Editor, Assistant
Elaine Showalter Contributor
Mary Gordon Foreword, Contributor
Angelica Garnett Introduction, Contributor
Michael Cunningham Introduction, Contributor
Maria Bosse-Sporleder Übersetzer, Translator
Susan Dick Editor
Elissa Schappell Contributor
Margo Jefferson Contributor
E. M. Forster Contributor
Daniel Mendelsohn Contributor
Sigrid Nunez Contributor
Deborah Eisenberg Contributor
James Wood Contributor
Julie Vivas Illustrator
Frances Spalding Editor, Composer
Ali Smith Foreword
Claudia Wenner Translator
Louis Kronenberger Contributor
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Sean Baker Narrator
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Jeanette Winterson Introduction
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Merry M. Pawlowski Introduction
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