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Archive for October, 2010

Ah, yet another book about the age of Virginia Woolf. Will I ever be able to whittle down my Woolf wish list?

This book, Romantic Moderns: English Writers, Artists and the Imagination from Virginia Woolf to John Piper by Alexandra Harris, is reviewed by Peter Parker in the Telegraph.

The book documents England’s particular brand of Modernism, one that successfully linked “the modern” with the quintessentially British. And who did that better than Woolf? According to Parker, no one.

The Guardian review calls the book “brilliant,” a quintessentially British adjective, and reports it is longlisted for the Guardian First Book Award.

The Guardian review claims the book also gives us permission to do something as touristy as taking tea at a National Trust property. Instead of being “something to pretend to find a chore,” that activity becomes “dignified,” thanks to the author’s kindness toward British places and people that usually get written off as an embarrassment.

You can read the first chapter on the Guardian website.

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Plug and play. That’s all you have to do to listen to the words of Virginia Woolf. Just as long as you have $40 or $50 to spend.

The Playaway Audiobook comes pre-loaded with digital content, earbuds and a battery, is half the size of a pack of cards and holds the audio for an entire book.

Despite its convenience, these items are too expensive for my budget. But they might come in handy for you some day. They are available on Amazon.com and on the Cleveland company’s website.

Many titles are available, including these by or about Virginia Woolf:

  • Mrs. Dalloway
  • To the Lighthouse
  • Classic Women’s Short Stories – by Kate Chopin, Katherine Mansfield and Virginia Woolf
  • Best of Women’s Stories, Vol. 2 – by Virginia Woolf; Jane Austen; Mary Shelley; L.M. Montgomery; Elizabeth Gaskell; Winifred Holtby; Katherine Mansfield; Kate Chopin
  • Virginia Woolf in 90 Minutes by Paul Strathern

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Woolf’s snobbery squared

Virginia Woolf could be acerbic. And rude. And sometimes downright nasty. One has only to read her diaries and letters to know that.

But Craig Brown has outdone Virginia with his parodies of her writing (and others) in The Lost Diaries. You can get a taste on The Guardian website. Scroll down to the end to read an imaginary entry from Virginia.

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Women have always served as inspiration. Now some of the most famous have inspired a line of wedding gowns. Among them is Virginia Woolf.

The Virginia Woolf gown as it appears on a bridal website

You will find the Virginia gown, along with long fancy white dresses inspired by such literary favorites as Jane Austen and Emily Dickinson at this link on the Carine’s Bridal website.

And in an interview with Rebecca, bridal designer for Carolina Herrera, you’ll learn why the Virginia gown is the designer’s favorite in the spring 2011 collection.

A special thanks to Kristin Czarnecki of Georgetown College for sending both links to the VW Listserv.

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Sissinghurst. It was home for Vita Sackville-West and Harold Nicolson and their sons. It is the site of one of the most celebrated gardens in English history. It is the location for Stephanie Barron’s mystery, The White Garden. And for Adam Nicolson, grandson of Vita and Harold, it is a working farm.

Anne Fernald reviews Nicolson’s book, Sissinghurst, for Open Letters Monthly. She traces the history of the property through its many incarnations and documents Nicolson’s love of the land.

Nicolson’s Sissinghurst story was also the subject of an eight-part BBC series last year, but it is not available online. However, the Kent News published a story on the project.

Fernald teaches at Fordham University and is currently at work on the Cambridge University Press edition of Virginia Woolf’s Mrs Dalloway. You can read more from her at Fernham.

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