In August, 1925, Virginia Woolf published an essay titled “American Fiction” in the London Saturday Review, where she serenely ruled out the importance of a number of leading U.S. novelists, including ...
When you purchase an independently reviewed book through our site, we earn an affiliate commission. By Claire Jarvis VIRGINIA WOOLF And the Women Who Shaped Her World By Gillian Gill You would be hard ...
“I am reduced to a thing that wants Virginia…It is incredible how essential to me you have become,” wrote Vita Sackville-West to the novelist Virginia Woolf in 1926. A popular writer herself, ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by American Ballet Theater brings Wayne McGregor’s “Woolf Works,” which evokes elements of three novels and the writer’s biography, to New York. By ...
Who’s offended by Virginia Woolf? How the writer’s Tavistock Square statue became a battleground for her legacy. By Anna Leszkiewicz On a grey, drizzly day in July, Virginia Woolf stares blankly over ...
The writer’s diaries reveal a mind striving to capture the elusive moment. By Anna Leszkiewicz In the summer of 1926, Virginia Woolf sat at her desk at Monk’s House, Sussex, opened her diary, and ...