Author:
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Penguin USA
Published: Sep 2004
Genre: Biography & Autobiography - Literary
Retail Price: $12.95
Pages: 136
Virginia Woolf was one of the most significant novelists of the twentieth century and a leading figure in the Bloomsbury Circle. In her brilliant, experimental novels, among them To the Lighthouse and Mrs. Dalloway, she extended the boundaries of fiction writing. While Woolf delighted in the friendships and intrigues of her literary milieu, her life was marred by mental illness, and in 1941 she drowned herself. Her life and work reveal her feminist ideals, her modernism, and her acute sensitivity to the minute details of human life.
In this volume, acclaimed scholar Mary Ann Caws examines the details of Woolf's career and haunted private life. Many of the accompanying illustrations showing Woolf and intimates from the famed Bloomsbury Circle-which included legendary economist John Maynard Keynes and biographer Lytton Strachey-are published here for the very first time, along with other rare photos and portraits providing rare insights into the mind of this enigmatic and influential writer.