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Virginia Woolfa guide to her greatest works
Mrs Dalloway (1925) is probably the most accessible of her great novels. A day in the life of a London society hostess is used as the structure for her experiments in multiple points of view. The themes she explores are the nature of personal identity; memory and consciousness; the passage of time; and the tensions between the forces of Life and Death. The novel abandons conventional notions of plot in favour of a mosaic of events.
DVD There is an excellent film version of Mrs Dalloway directed by Dutch filmmaker Marleen Gorris. It's a visually low key rendering of the original, but it captures the spirit of the novel very well. Outstanding performance by Vanessa Redgrave in the principal role, and Natascha McElhone as her younger self. The screenplay, interestingly, was written by actor-author Eileen Atkins.
To the Lighthouse is the second of the twin jewels in the crown of her late experimental phase. It is concerned with the passage of time, the nature of human consciousness, and the process of artistic creativity. Woolf substitutes symbolism and poetic prose for any notion of plot, and the novel is composed as a tryptich of three almost static scenes - during the second of which the principal character Mrs Ramsay dies - literally within a parenthesis.
Orlando is one of her lesser-known novels, although it's critical reputation has risen in recent years. It's a delightful fantasy which features a character who changes sex part-way through the book - and lives from the sixteenth to the twentieth century. Using this device (which turns out to be strangely credible) Woolf explores issues of gender and identity as her hero-heroine moves through a variety of lives and personal adventures.
The Waves is her most experimental and most demanding novel. Rather like her exact contemporary James Joyce, she was pushing the possibilities of the novel to their furthest limit. She abandons conventional narrative and setting altogether, and substitutes the interior monologues of six different characters. They are friends (and lovers) whose lives are revealed by what they think about themselves and each other.
Between the Acts is her last novel, in which she returns to a less demanding literary style. Despite being written immediately before her suicide, she combines a playful wittiness with her satirical critique of English upper middle-class life. The story is set in the summer of 1939 on the day of the annual village fete at Pointz Hall. It describes a country pageant on English history written by Miss La Trobe, and its effects on the people who watch it.
Kew Gardens is a collection of experimental short stories in which Woolf tested out ideas and techniques which she then later incorporated into her novels. After Chekhov, they represent the most important development in the modern short story as a literary form. Incident and narrative are replaced by evocations of mood, poetic imagery, philosophic reflection, and subtleties of composition and structure.
The Complete Shorter Fiction contains all the classic short stories such as 'The Mark on the Wall', 'A Haunted House', and 'The String Quartet' - but also the shorter fragments and experimental pieces such as 'Mrs Dalloway in Bond Street'. These 'sketches' (as she called them) were used to practice the techniques she used in her longer fictions. Nearly fifty pieces written over the course of Woolf's writing career are arranged chronologically to offer insights into her development as a writer. This is one for connoisseurs - well presented and edited in a scholarly manner.
The Hours is an amazingly successful film adaptation of Michael Cunningham's fictional take on Mrs Dalloway. Fragments of Virginia Woolf's biography are interwoven with stories from 1950's Los Angeles and contemporary New York. It's not a direct adaptation but a stunning interpretation of Woolf and her world, her themes, and even her narrative techniques. It is beautifully photographed, and the evocation of Woolf's creative process is particularly impressive.
Virginia Woolf is a readable and well illustrated biography by John Lehmann, who at one point worked as her assistant at the Hogarth Press. It is described by the blurb as 'A critical biography of Virginia Woolf containing illustrations that are a record of the Bloomsbury Group and the literary and artistic world that surrounded a writer who is immensely popular today'. An attractive and very accessible introduction to the subject.
The Cambridge Companion to Virginia Woolf is a collection of essays which
addresses the full range of her intellectual perspectives - literary, artistic,
philosophical and political. It provides
new readings of all nine novels and fresh insight into Woolf's
letters, diaries and essays. The progress of Woolf's thinking is revealed from Bloomsbury aestheticism through her hatred of censorship, corruption and hierarchy to her concern with all aspects of modernism.
Virginia Woolf
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