News blogs and Web sites are busy publishing ruminations about books and writing. Here are links to a few with connections to my favorite author. Virginia Woolf, of course.
- In the Wall Street Journal, Rebecca Stott names Woolf’s Orlando as number two in a list of the top five works of historical fiction.
- A Seattle Post-Intelligencer reader blog, written by a local librarian named Ann G., is “Looking back at reading by the decade.” In the post, Ann picks her favorite book by decade. For the 1930s, her choice is The Years. The novel, Woolf’s last published in her lifetime, was praised by the New York Times as her “richest novel” when it came out in 1937. It became a best seller in the United States that year. As a result, Woolf was featured on the April 12, 1937, cover of Time magazine. The cover story compared Woolf to Margaret Mitchell, whose Gone With the Wind was a 1936 best seller.
- In an ode to diaries on The Guardian’s Web site, writer Gyles Brandreth pays homage to an edited volume of Woolf’s diary entries. Brandreth praises the volume, titled A Moment’s Liberty: The Shorter Diary of Virginia Woolf, for including “a gem on every page.” Anne Olivier Bell is the editor.
- Margaret Drabble opines about the unique genre of the short story on The Guardian Web site. In her piece, she says Woolf tried to emulate her rival Katherine Mansfield’s short story style. But Drabble finds Woolf’s style “less accomplished, and sometimes embarrassingly whimsical.”
- The New York Times 100 Notable Books of 2009 includes at least two by authors who read Woolf. They include
- Family Album by Penelope Lively, whose City of the Mind is clearly influenced by Mrs. Dalloway, and
- A Paradise Built in Hell: The Extraordinary Communities That Arise in Disaster by Rebecca Solnit, plenary speaker at this year’s Woolf and the City, the 19th Annual International Conference on Virginia Woolf.
PAULA ! YOU are amazing ! I LOVE YOUR Woolf enthusiasm . GOD BLESS YOU BOTH :).
Thanks for adding those connections, Alice. Perhaps other readers will find more.
Hi Paula – I saw 3 more Woolf-influenced novelists in the NY Times Top 100: Alice Munro, who has made direct reference to Woolf in a few of her stories as well as indirect allusion; Kate Walbert, who used Woolf in a couple of the linked stories that comprised her previous novel, Our Kind; and Margaret Atwood, who started Oryx and Crake with an epigraph from To the Lighthouse and cited Woolf a couple of times within the novel. Alice