Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for August, 2012

Pat Barker’s new novel, Toby’s Room, hasn’t been released in the States yet, but I’m looking forward to it eagerly, with its allusions to Jacob’s Room. Instead, I found the 2008 Life Class at the library and snapped it up. Only later did I recall having heard that Toby’s Room is a sequel to Life Class; my reading it first is purely serendipitous.

Barker is in her most familiar territory, World War I, in this story about Paul and Elinor, who meet as painting students at the Slade. When the war starts, Paul leaves his studies to serve as an ambulance driver in France. Toby is Elinor’s brother, a medical student, and he too enlists. Elinor and Paul correspond regularly, and she writes to him about an exciting encounter:

“I’ve been to tea with Lady Ottoline Morrell! I never thought I’d live to see the day. I met her at the Camden Street Gallery and she looked at me very intently for a long time and then she said in that vague way of hers, wafting a jeweled hand about above her head, You must come to tea sometime. Do come to tea….” Elinor is prepared to dismiss this as idle chatter until she receives a written invitation, which she accepts. She describes the encounter to Paul: “She’s not easy to talk to, though she is interested in everything you say. You feel she’s listening, not just waiting for the chance to make some clever remark her self like most of that Bloomsbury crowd….”

A group at Garsington Manor, country home of L...

A group at Garsington Manor, country home of Lady Ottoline Morrell, near Oxford. Left to right: Lady Ottoline Morrell, Mrs. Aldous Huxley, Lytton Strachey, Duncan Grant, and Vanessa Bell. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

The acquaintanceship continues. Elinor isn’t totally comfortable; she feels that Lady Ott wants something from her—”She seems to be drawing your soul out of your body … a kind of cannibalism”—but she’s swept up in the milieu. She writes to Paul about a party at which Ott holds up a purple feather boa and hands it to “a tall etiolated man with a straggly beard who wrapped it around his neck and immediately started to dance a minuet….” What do you think—Lytton? Later, Elinor is “seized by a man who looked like a highly intelligent teddy bear and spoke with dry, devouring passion about how the war must stop, now, at once, this instant, keeping his gaze fixed on my bosom the while…” Clive?

Woolf isn’t mentioned, but you sense her in the shadows, perhaps in deep conversation with someone or other on a velvet covered settee. And apparently Elinor will meet her in Toby’s Room.

Read Full Post »

It’s summer, and the livin’ is easy, so maybe that’s why To The Lighthouse is in the limelight in this week’s Woolf sightings.

First, several blog posts (2-4) discuss The Guardian article that includes Virginia Woolf’s To the Lighthouse among the top 10 most difficult books. Second, a New Yorker blog post (6) mistakenly includes the assertion that Woolf’s novel is among “literature’s great unmade movies,” ignoring the 1983 made-for-TV movie directed by Colin Gregg. Third, the novel inspires the theme of a theatre festival for British young people (15).

  1. Tucsonans share picks for summer readsArizona Daily Star
    A good summer getaway.” Karen Falkenstrom, director, Odaiko Sonora, Japanese drumming ensemble. • What she’s reading: “The Voyage Out” by Virginia Woolf. “Woolf is a master of well-wrought descriptive language and has an extraordinary sensitivity for 
  2. 10 hardest books should push usThe Periscope Post
    I’ve read three – Edmund Spenser’s The Faerie Queen, which I have been re-reading intermittently this year; Jonathan Swift’s A Tale of A Tub, although it was a fair while ago; and Virginia Woolf’s To The Lighthouse, the inclusion of which has caused 
  3. The world’s most difficult books: how many have you read?The Guardian (blog)
    Nightwood by Djuna Barnes; A Tale of a Tub by Jonathan Swift; The Phenomenology of Spirit by GF Hegel; To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf; Clarissa, or, The History of a Young Lady by Samuel Richardson; Finnegans Wake by James Joyce; Being and
  4. The Top 10 Most Difficult BooksPublishers Weekly
    To The Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf – In its intermingling of separate consciousnesses, Virginia Woolf’s fiction is both intellectually and psychically difficult. Not only is it hard to tell who’s who and who’s saying or thinking what, it is also disconcerting—even 
  5. Book News: Drinking Poetically, Programming in Verse, New Yorker (blog)
    Reviving the dwindling reputation of Thomas Browne, a Renaissance author who inspired Melville, Dickinson, and Virginia Woolf. A recipe for the “particularly insidious punch” Robert Penn Warren made to celebrate his thirty-eighth birthday.
  6. Literature’s Great Unmade Movies, New Yorker(blog)
    Jane Smiley selected Virginia Woolf’s “To the Lighthouse”—surely a challenge to any filmmaker. She saw Jeremy Irons and Glenn Close as stars. For John Updike, “La Princesse de Clèves” by Mme. De Lafayette, offered “a succession of moonlit scenes” in 

    To the Lighthouse, 1983 movie directed by Colin Gregg

  7. 3 Amazing Literary Pilgrimages (PHOTOS)Huffington Post (blog)
    Did Clarissa Dalloway kiss Sally Seton, smelling the fresh flowers and green summer grass, in the same garden where Virginia Woolf sat, writing her story? Unfortunately, to humanity’s and to my own great dismay, we may never ask Mrs. Woolf this 
  8. Walking Tour of London’s Literary PubsTravel Agent
    Neither was a famous drinker, but it was in the company of Charles Dickens andVirginia Woolf that the capital’s first literary pub crawl set out from the Writers and Artists Bar in the basement of the Fitzroy Tavern (16 Charlotte Street, W1), in 
  9. Blu-ray Review: ‘Orlando’ (rerelease), Cine-Vue
    Released on Blu-ray for the very first time courtesy of UK distributor Artificial Eye, Sally Potter’s lavish 1992 adaptation of Virginia Woolf’s century-spanning novel Orlando marked the arrival of British actress Tilda Swinton onto the international 
  10. Competition: Win Sally Potter’s re-released ‘Orlando’ on Blu-rayCine-Vue
    Potter’s dazzling adaptation of Virginia Woolf’s classic novel is the tale of the apparently immortal Orlando, who begins an epic quest for love and freedom in the court of Elizabeth I as a man and completes the search 400 years later as a woman. This journey 
  11. Motherhood Does Not Make Every Woman a Better Writer (Or a Better Person xoJane
    But to project what-ifs onto women like Jane Austen — or Virginia Woolf, or Charlotte or Emily Brontë, or any number of women authors from history who dared sacrifice motherhood for writing — and then to suggest that the experience of biological 
  12. Reviving Thomas Browne, an Expert on OblivionNew York Times
    Virginia Woolf said he paved the way for all psychological novelists, and Borges, who translated him, once described himself as just another word for Browne (and for Kafka and Chesterton). Browne was a reverent Christian who professed to care more 
  13. The Heroine in the Drawing RoomWall Street Journal
    If a woman wrote the same text, it would just be…a domestic novel.” Virginia Woolfwrote much the same in “A Room of One’s Own”: “This is an important book, the critic assumes, because it deals with war. This is an insignificant book because it deals with the 
  14. Heads Up: ‘NW’The Independent
    Insider knowledge Smith took inspiration from another great female novelist who hymned our capital:Virginia Woolf. At BookExpo America Smith said in an interview that Woolf “kept her going”, as a “good example of a forward-thinking and yet consistently 
  15. Porthleven hosts international youth theatre festivalThis is The West Country
    The theme of lighthouses was chosen because of its versatility and the fact it had been inspirational to many artists such as Virginia Woolf, whose classic novel ‘The Lighthouse’ was based on the lighthouse in Godrevy. Mrs Parish said: “’Lighthouses’ [as a 
  16. DVD Review: The Forsyte Saga CollectionBlogcritics.org (blog)
    Writing at a time when new ideas about what literature ought to do were changing and writers like Virginia Woolf and James Joyce were looking to these new horizons, Galsworthy’s work seemed to many to be looking in the wrong direction. He was behind the 

Read Full Post »

Six articles on Virginia Woolf in English Studies are now available online on the Routledge website, free of charge.

They include:

  • Virginia Woolf’s Second Visit to Greece
  • Structure and Anti-Structure: Virginia Woolf’s Feminist Politics and “The Mark on the Wall”
  • Modernism, Memory, and Desire: T. S. Eliot and Virginia Woolf
  • Women Knitting: Domestic Activity, Writing, and Distance in Virginia Woolf’s Fiction
  • Virginia Woolf and the Chimes of Big Ben
  • Virginia Woolf’s Kew Gardens

You can access the articles here by downloading them as PDFs or reading them online. Illustrations are included.

Read Full Post »

Anne Fernald, associate professor at Fordham University and the editor of a forthcoming edition of Mrs. Dalloway for Cambridge University Press, will give the first of four talks on Virginia Woolf at the Brooklyn Public Library, Aug. 22, from 3 – 5 p.m.

Fittingly, Fernald’s Aug. 22 talk will be on the topic of Mrs. Dalloway and will be held in the Central Library’s Reverend Elsie Smith Room.

The other three talks are:

Great Books: Virginia Woolf: To the Lighthouse
Date: Wednesday, Sept. 5, 3 p.m.

Great Books: Virginia Woolf: Between the Acts
Date: Wednesday, Sept. 19, 3 p.m.

Great Books: Virginia Woolf: Moments of Being
Date:
 Wednesday, Oct. 3, 3 p.m.

All talks in the series will be held in the Central Library, Reverend Elsie Smith Room, Brooklyn Public Library. The series is made possible through Brooklyn Public Library’s Fund for the Humanities, established through the support of the National Endowment for the Humanities.

Read Full Post »

The spring 2012 issue of the Virginia Woolf Miscellany is now available online in PDF format. Here’s what you’ll find inside its pages:

  • Articles addressing the “Eco-Woolf” topic, guest edited by Diana Swanson
  • Book reviews overseen by Karen Levenback, Miscellany book editor
  • Useful information about

Prior issues dating from spring 2003 are also available online.

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »