Virginia Woolf

Virginia Woolf

Virginia Woolf has written at least 318 books. Their most popular book is To the Lighthouse with 732 saves with an average rating of 3.75⭐.

Author Bio

Virginia Woolf was an English novelist, essayist, diarist, epistler, publisher, feminist, and writer of short stories, regarded as one of the foremost modernist literary figures of the twentieth century. ([Source][1].)

[Comment from Ursula Le Guin on The Guardian][2]:

> You can't write science fiction well if you haven't read it, though not all who try to write it know this. But nor can you write it well if you haven't read anything else. Genre is a rich dialect, in which you can say certain things in a particularly satisfying way, but if it gives up connection with the general literary language it becomes a jargon, meaningful only to an ingroup. Useful models may be found quite outside the genre. I learned a lot from reading the ever-subversive Virginia Woolf.

> I was 17 when I read [Orlando][3]. It was half-revelation, half-confusion to me at that age, but one thing was clear: that she imagined a society vastly different from our own, an exotic world, and brought it dramatically alive. I'm thinking of the Elizabethan scenes, the winter when the Thames froze over. Reading, I was there, saw the bonfires blazing in the ice, felt the marvellous strangeness of that moment 500 years ago – the authentic thrill of being taken absolutely elsewhere.

> How did she do it? By precise, specific descriptive details, not heaped up and not explained: a vivid, telling imagery, highly selected, encouraging the reader's imagination to fill out the picture and see it luminous, complete.

> In [Flush][4], Woolf gets inside a dog's mind, that is, a non-human brain, an alien mentality – very science-fictional if you look at it that way. Again what I learned was the power of accurate, vivid, highly selected detail. I imagine Woolf looking down at the dog asleep beside the ratty armchair she wrote in and thinking what are your dreams? and listening . . . sniffing the wind . . . after the rabbit, out on the hills, in the dog's timeless world.

> Useful stuff, for those who like to see through eyes other than our own.


[1]:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virginia_Woolf
[2]: http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2011/may/14/science-fiction-authors-choice
[3]: http://openlibrary.org/works/OL39360W/Orlando
[4]: http://openlibrary.org/works/OL39320W/Flush

Nurse Lugton's Curtain

Nurse Lugton's Curtain
ByVirginia Woolf

1991 • 32 pages

Os diários de Virginia Woolf - Volume 2

2022 • 460 pages

Cover 8

K svetilniku
ByVirginia Woolf

2004 • 158 pages

Os Melhores Contos de Virginia Woolf

2021 • 120 pages

Cover 4

1926 • 7 pages

Lettere a un giovane poeta

2017 • 49 pages

Una stanza tutta per sé. Ediz. integrale

2017 • 144 pages

Cover 1

50 Feminist Masterpieces You Have to Read Before You Die
ByJane Addams,Louisa May Alcott,+26 more

Cover 2

The Letters of Vita Sackville-West to Virginia Woolf
ByVictoria Sackville-West,Virginia Woolf

2001 • 384 pages

Kew Gardens Virginia Woolf

1919 • 32 pages

Cover 5

Liberty
ByVirginia Woolf

2018 • 128 pages

Genio e Inchiostro

Genio e Inchiostro
ByVirginia Woolf

2021

Londra

Londra
ByVirginia Woolf

2017 • 192 pages

Cartas de Amor

Cartas de Amor
ByVirginia Woolf,Vita Sackville-West,+1 more

1926 • 288 pages

The Hours / Mrs. Dalloway

The Hours / Mrs. Dalloway
ByMichael Cunningham,Virginia Woolf

2022 • 295 pages

Os diários de Virginia Woolf - Volume 1

2021 • 344 pages

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The Solid Objects
ByVirginia Woolf

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Solid Objects
ByVirginia Woolf

A Haunted House and Other Stories

1921 • 154 pages

Mrs. Dalloway's Party

Mrs. Dalloway's Party
ByVirginia Woolf

2004 • 100 pages

Una cambra pròpia

Una cambra pròpia
ByVirginia Woolf,Helena Valentí(Translator)

1929 • 144 pages

A Room of One's Own: A Womb for One's Self

1929 • 122 pages

A Room of One's Own/Three Guineas

1938 • 424 pages

A Room of One’s Own and Three Guineas

2014 • 320 pages