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I am two weeks late with this. Life interrupted my efforts to celebrate Virginia Woolf’s 130th birthday with style.

Here, instead, is a collection of birthday wishes from around the World Wide Web. The candles have already been extinguished, but the wishes are just as sweet all the same.

You can also read birthday wishes and events reported by Blogging Woolf in the past: Marking Virginia Woolf’s birthday, Come to belated NYC birthday tea for Virginia, Happy birthday, dear Virginia, in music, Happy birthday, dear Virginia, Virginia’s 127th birthday party will be on two stages, Celebrate Virginia’s birthday with Freshwater,

  1. On the occasion of Virginia’s birthday, AROO Speaks (blog)
  2. Happy Birthday, Miss Jan, Fernham
  3. I’m Not Afraid of Virginia Woolf: 5 Things to Do On the Author’s 130th birthday, Isak (blog)
  4. Virginia Woolf: Provocative quotes for her 130th birthdayWashington Post The Style Blog
    Virginia Woolf left behind a legacy of words that influence writers to this day, 130 years after her birth. So on her birthday, we’ve pulled some of the most provocative quotes from the
  5. The Virginia Woolf Society of Great Britain, HollandSentinel.com
    Head to this website today on the birthday of Virginia Woolf (she was born in 1882) to learn more about the writer. The society collects biographical information, has a bibliography, has resource materials and more. 5: Most Super Bowl titles won by a
  6. Virginia Woolf, Reading Over Dorothy Wordsworth’s Shoulder: A Birthday Tribute, Town Topics
    It’s late at night, the wind is blowing, and for the first time in too many years, I’m reading Virginia Woolf, who was born on January 25, 1882. In a piece about Dorothy Wordsworth, who died on January 25, 1855, Woolf is writing so lucidly and
  7. Five Things You Need to Know Today: Jan. 25, 2012, Patch.com
    Born on this day in history: English writer Virginia Woolf (1882), famed American runner Steve Prefontaine (1951) and singer Alicia keys (1981). 1. Thayer Public Library is hosting The Reader’s Group Book Club at 7:15 pm in the Logan
  8. Quinceañera Expo, NorthFulton.com
    1882: Virginia Woolf, English author (Mrs. Dalloway and Orlando). 1930: New York police rout a Communist rally at the Town Hall. 1943: The last German airfield in Stalingrad is captured by the Red Army. 1949: Axis Sally, who broadcasted Nazi propaganda
  9. HelloGiggles – Happy Birthday, Virginia Woolf!, Hello Giggles

An Australian play that includes a character struggling with a thesis on Virginia Woolf (#12). An investment piece that includes a long Woolf quote (#21). A Broadway play that features two Bloomsbury artists and their bedroom politics (#23). A new translation of Woolf short stories (#22). And instructions on how to date Virginia (#56). All that and more are included in the Woolf sightings that follow.

  1. A Point of View: Mourning the loss of the written word, BBC News
    The modernist writer Virginia Woolf called letter writing “the human art, which owes its origins in the love of friends”. In our frenetic world of electronic communication, we must remember to write with thought and consideration, says historian Lisa
  2. The Weekly Yiderati: Virginia Woolf’s Rebbe, The Maus Legacy, Tony Judt, And , Jewcy.com (blog)
    A Rabbi in the world of the famous Bloomsbury Group? Apparently so. Check out his story here. Recently, Art Spiegelman of Maus fame, published a new book entitled MetaMaus. It’s exactly what it sounds like: a book
  3. Stuart Kelly: Internet start of new chapter for old classics, Scotsman (blog)
    On 1 January this year, the works of the two most significant modern novelists, James Joyce and Virginia Woolf, left copyright and entered the public domain. It is the second time in my lifetime this has happened. Back in 1992, when I was still a
  4. Spring arts season offers variety of unique collaborations, Brandeis University
    From a stage adaptation of Virginia Woolf’s stories to Afghan and Indian music residencies; a modern dance and sculpture collaboration to a celebration of the Rose Art Museum, the spring arts season features a variety of offerings to entertain and
  5. The Passionate Reader: February 3, 2012, Women’s Wear Daily (blog)
    Then there’s the fact that he was devastatingly good-looking, which can lead people to underestimate men as well as women; even Virginia Woolf bragged of skinny-dipping with him! However, Brooke never made it to the front lines — he died of sepsis at
  6. Robin Lane Fox talks about the National Trust’s success as a popular , Financial Times
    They come to pay their respects to the garden in which Vita once made love with the novelist Virginia Woolf. Now the garden opens even earlier in March while the beds are still bare earth, “wet mud” in Jenkins’s view of them.
  7. Annie Leibovitz’s Personless Photography At The Smithsonian (PHOTOS, VIDEO), Huffington Post
    She captured Sigmund Freud’s couch, Emily Dickinson’s dress and the water where Virginia Woolf drowned herself. She saw Charles Darwin’s specimen collection and Abraham Lincoln’s top hat. Her subjects ranged from the universally symbolic to the vastly
  8. Annie Leibovitz: Pilgrimage, Art Newspaper
    including artists and photographers such as Georgia O’Keeffe, Robert Smithson and Ansel Adams, and the likes of Abraham Lincoln and Annie Oakley , and a few overseas detours to explore the homes of Virginia Woolf and Charles Darwin in England.
  9. Annie Leibovitz opens new art show at Smithsonian, CBS News
    As a nod to Sontag, Leibovitz visited the home of Virginia Woolf, one of her partner’s favorite writers, where she was happy to learn such a brilliant person could have such a messy studio, she said. Andy Grundberg, guest curator for the show and a
  10. Personal Photographs by Annie Leibovitz, Without the Celebrities, Flavorwire
    Leibovitz would go to Virginia Woolf’s house, her late partner Susan Sontag’s favorite. She would see Freud’s storied couch. She would find Emily Dickinson’s last surviving dress, Georgia O’Keeffe’s pastels, and the television Elvis shot a bullet
  11. Exhibiting a photographic ‘Pilgrimage’, GW Hatchet (subscription)
    The stained table used by writer Virginia Woolf is the subject of one piece featured in ‘Pilgrimage.’ Over time the project, which now makes up the moving exhibit “Pilgrimage,” transformed into a collection featuring the relics of notable subjects,
  12. Clever, moving tale of intersecting lives, Sydney Morning Herald
    Said notebook belongs to Deb (Erica Lovell), an unhappy grad student whose thesis on Virginia Woolf hangs on her getting it back. Sensing a “New York moment” in the making, Warren suggests they meet up in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in front of a
  13. Heloise and Abelard at Harvard, Harvard Magazine
    She had never written a libretto before, but her experience studying and writing about feminism, Virginia Woolf, and James Joyce prepared her for the work. Austin built off her completed libretto, completing the opera about a year before the January
  14. How can you mend a broken heart?, Khaleej Times
    Virginia Woolf  There is no darkness without light, no knowing good without knowing bad, and love and loss are two sides of the same coin. Yet platitudes seem useless when you’re suffering from a broken heart. Losing someone you love can make you feel
  15. Madonna’s ‘WE’ With Andrea Riseborough and Abbie Cornish, New York Times
    In both that book and its film adaptation, Virginia Woolf’s “Mrs. Dalloway” serves as the pivot for three women (Woolf included) from three eras whose lives, over the course of a day, unfold in something like transcendent synchronicity.
  16. Ostracism: Why It Produces Unique Voices That Can’t Be Copied, Huffington Post (blog)
    Virginia Woolf’s ongoing battle with depression, as well as the death of her mother and father, provided piercing narratives born of her view of the world through a lens of gloom and desperation to which many readers could relate.
  17. ‘I was a proper nerd’, Irish Times
    I was also reading a lot of poetry by strong women like Sylvia Plath and Virginia Woolf, who also had very serious subjects. I was always much older than my age.” But the songs were good and the talent was there. By the time Sandé was 16,
  18. ‘Shakespeare’s Sisters’ at Folger Library, Washington Post
    Virginia Woolf didn’t get a lot wrong when it came to women’s issues, but one of her most famous observations — that a fictional sister of William Shakespeare who longed to write would have been doomed to failure — was actually selling women of the
  19. Blimey, Bill Gross has been on the Virginia Woolf, FT Alphaville (blog)
    I don’t remember much of this life, and like Virginia Woolf, nothing of the herebefore. How then, could I expect to know of the hereafter? I know at least that we all exist at and of the moment and that we make up those moments as we go along.
  20. Times Food and Nightlife Guide Awards 2012, Times of India
    British novelist Virginia Woolf famously said, “One cannot think well, love well, sleep well, if one has not dined well.” If you think of it, food wields quite some power and so, deserves recognition, too. And Tuesday night brought moments of fame for
  21. Bill Gross: Free Money Ain’t Really Free, Wall Street Journal (blog)
    But with this post we’re going to focus on some genuinely meaty thoughts from Gross in this month’s investment outlook (and frankly skip the first 400 words of his missive and depressing quote from Virginia Woolf about death.) We noted yesterday that
  22. Literary Translator Says Virginia Woolf Not Just Another Icon, STA – Slovenska Tiskovna Agencija (subscription)
    Ljubljana, 1 February (STA) – Tina Mahkota, one of the three translators of “The Mark on the Wall – Collection of Short Stories by Virginia Woolf” says in an interview with the STA that the project of translating one of the key modernist literary
  23. ETERNAL EQUINOX to Receive NY Premiere at 59E59 Theaters, Broadway World
    She became a student in UCLA’s writing program and began work on a novel about the Bloomsbury Group, a topic that attracted her interest many years before when she wrote her thesis on Virginia Woolf. After several trips to Charleston in West Sussex,
  24. Where Have All the Old People Gone?, Huffington Post (blog)
    They were my tie to my roots — on one side the crusty, frugal New Englanders, and on the other, the English-Scottish, between-the-wars generation of CS Lewis, Ralph Vaugh Williams, Virginia Woolf and Winston Churchill. Dickens characters joined us at
  25. Notes and queries: What is the best last line of a novel?, The Guardian
    Virginia Woolf, Mrs Dalloway. “A couple giggled in a dark doorway. Someone started a gramophone in the middle of a record, explosively.” – PH Newby, Agents and Witnesses. Charles Boardman, Nottingham “So we beat on, boats against the current,
  26. REVIEW: Ordinary Days | Darlinghurst Theatre, Sydney, Crikey (blog)
    Erica Lovell is Deb, struggling with her thesis on Virginia Woolf, bound together in a notebook, thanks to the fragile, last-legs status of her notebook computer. She’s feisty and highly-strung, traits exacerbated by the loss of her work.
  27. Professor Donna, Mail Tribune
    She wrote scholarly books on Richard Hugo, Iris Murdoch, and John Synge, loved the poetry of William Yeats, and was passionate about modernist women writers, especially Virginia Woolf and Gertrude Stein, both of whom she was fond of quoting at grand
  28. Time to update copyright law?, CNN
    This year’s class is particularly strong, as the novels of James Joyce and Virginia Woolf are now free of copyright protection. If you ever wanted to stage a puppet show of Joyce’s masterpiece “Ulysses” or set Woolf’s “Mrs. Dalloway” to music,
  29. Why aren’t there more women artists?, San Francisco Chronicle (blog)
    The obvious answer is that so many women lack access to money and power as Virginia Woolf told us years ago. In order to create, you need a room of your own. I read another great theory in a book I love called Goddesses in Every Woman.
  30. Rodin’s Drawings, Huffington Post
    (Interestingly, Virginia Woolf understood this problem, perhaps because of her close friendship with the critic Roger Fry, who was also a painter. Thus in To the Lighthouse, Woolf wrote of the experimental painter Lily Briscoe that “She could see it
  31. Editorial: Roseburg Senior Center Expansion can contribute to enriched lives, NRToday.com
    Space in which to maneuver and grow seems like a reasonable request. In the days when the office was largely a male preserve, Virginia Woolf wrote of the need for women to have rooms of their own in which to produce satisfying wo…
  32. College Major and Family Mental Illness, New York Times (blog)
    And the findings resonate with high-profile examples of brilliant artists who suffered from mental illness (Ernest Hemingway, Kurt Cobain, Virginia Woolf, Edvard Munch, etc.). Prior studies have also supported the link between autism and familial
  33. How to Get High on Soil, The Atlantic
    Outside, the sky glimmers a dim, silver-gray — it’s filled with clouds that Virginia Woolf would have described as “implacable.” I have always been sensitive to such days. The dishwater light trickles through the window and infects me with malaise.
  34. The Cantabrigians who turned down honours, Varsity Online
    Virginia Woolf’s husband Leonard Woolf, the notable publisher and political theorist of Trinity College, said no to the offer of becoming a Companion of Honour. Martin Rosenbaum, who obtained the release of the list on behalf of the BBC, said that “for
  35. Having Trouble Getting Yourself to Write? 9 Tips, Huffington Post
    Virginia Woolf noted in her diary: “The way to rock oneself back into writing is this. First gentle exercise in the air. Second the reading of good literature. It is a mistake to think that literature can be produced from the raw.”
  36. 10 Great Movies about “Women Finding Themselves”, Huffington Post
    Here, she plays a man and a woman who live forever, based on the Virginia Woolf novel of the same name. Worth reading the book and watching the movie, but there is one scene in which she is running in the wet English grass in a black gown and, I think,
  37. John Walsh: Stand by your four-posters, this soap could get steamier, The Independent
    We’re promised a lesbian love affair between “straight-talking spinster” Dr Blanche Mottershead (Alex Kingston) and Lady Portia (Emilia Fox), a nod to the late-1930s romantic convergence of Virginia Woolf and Vita Sackville-West.
  38. From the Vaults: Albert and Orlando: Women wear the pants in “Albert Nobbs , Austin Chronicle (blog)
    The film is Sally Potter’s free adaptation of Virginia Woolf’s 1928 novel in which the hero reincarnates over four centuries into the bodies of various women and men, noble-born and otherwise. Swinton wears her Elizabethan pantaloons with swagger in
  39. Ian McMillan: Cinematic memories of an evening of laughter, Yorkshire Post
    Maybe we should have left it at that, and I blame Andrew Swift for the debacle that happened in Dick’s next English lecture, the one on Virginia Woolf. It was Swifty’s idea that somebody should turn off the lights in the lecture theatre and then a lad
  40. Newnan Community Theatre Company Resource for all things theatrical, Newnan Times-Herald
    You can see the original Winnie the Pooh stuffed animals there as well as Virginia Woolf’s diary and walking stick.” Look for information in the upcoming months about a New York trip in January 2013. A more immediate way to get involved is to come to
  41. The Liberal Arts as Guideposts in the 21st Century, Chronicle of Higher Education (subscription)
    Virginia Woolf used a different spatial image to make a similar point in her book Three Guineas, when she talked about the importance of cultivating taste and the knowledge of the arts and literature and music. She argues that people who are so caught
  42. Working from home, The Hindu
    Virginia Woolf, in her essay ‘A room of one’s own’, stressed on the need for women to have their own space to explore their writing skills. Though she was referring to women, the notion that one can flourish in an independent environment is applicable
  43. Reconsidering the Genius of Gertrude Stein, New York Times
    Readers know the extraordinary reputations of Shakespeare and Virginia Woolf, but some prefer “Richard III” to “Richard II,” or “Mrs. Dalloway” to “Orlando.” They feel at liberty to discriminate. Fewer readers imagine they can create their own Stein;
  44. KUNC Entertainment Report, KUNC
    Bas Bleu Theatre opens If We Are Women, An intergenerational “conversation” proving, as Virginia Woolf said, “If we are women, we think back through our mothers.” Feb 5th. The show runs the 5th& 6thin 7:30 performances and a Feb 11 – 2:30pm matinee.
  45. The elite achievers who turned down an honour, Cambridge News
    The publisher and political theorist Leonard Woolf, of Trinity Colllege, husband of the writer Virginia Woolf, was another Cambridge man to refuse the official glory. He said no to the offer of being made a Companion of Honour in 1966,
  46. ‘I prefer being a journalist’, Daily Sun
    I later found this in Virginia Woolf, and I like the way she uses it better than Joyce. Although I later realized that the person who invented this interior monologue was the anonymous writer of the Lazarillo de Tormes. Can you name some of your early
  47. Bloomsbury launches high-flying Circus, The Bookseller
    Meanwhile, New Zealand writer Emily Perkins’ The Forrests is “reminiscent of Virginia Woolf’s The Waves”, telling of a woman’s life from birth to death “written in exquisite prose”. Pringle said she had “the very highest hopes” for the novel,
  48. Five Books I’d Read, Washington City Paper (blog)
    This depressing-sounding novel is about a woman with a fondness for thrift store-shopping has been compared to Virginia Woolf, which is either a plus or a red flag depending on your opinion of To the Lighthouse. My father, for example, talks about To
  49. Virginia Woolf celebrated in Westport read-athon, Westport-News
    Fast is the impetus behind the celebration of one such trailblazer — English writer, literary critic and feminist Virginia Woolf (1882-1941), whose life was complicated by mental illness and the burden of competing in a patriarchal society that put
  50. Why the Romantics were wrong, Varsity Online
    Even if you know nothing else about Virginia Woolf, you’ve probably heard her most famous maxim: that “a woman must have money and a room of her own if she is to write fiction”. Feminist concerns aside, this notorious statement seems to
  51. Curtain Call: Supremes Bow to Congressional Authority on Copyright Terms, JD Supra (press release)
    dominant international copyright scheme under the Berne Convention but, in so doing, removed a bulk of works by foreign authors from the public domain (eg, certain symphonies by Shostakovich, books by Virginia Woolf, or artwork by Pablo Picasso).
  52. Is it curbing your freedom?, Deccan Herald
    Sanya Hashmi, a student of English Honours, says, “Probably, they should rename both the place ‘Virginia’ and the writer ‘Virginia Woolf‘ as both won’t show up any results on the internet after this.” She adds that the government should consider
  53. The timeless power of the Bard, Spiked
    Virginia Woolf once wrote that ‘fiction is like a spider’s web, attached ever so lightly… to life at all four corners’, and Fiennes reinterprets his source material without sacrificing the ethereal uniqueness of the text. Shakespeare’s plays, as Woolf
  54. Up and away: Nicole Kidman swaps her straight locks for a bouffant hairstyle, Daily Mail
    The actress – who won an Oscar for her portrayal of the writer Virginia Woolf in The Hours, said recently: ‘It was kind of a necessity in the journey of my career to find these women and tell their stories. ‘I love these women that defy the odds and
  55. Tilda Swinton is ‘Kevin’s’ troubled mom, Newsday
    Special to Newsday Scotland’s Tilda Swinton is known for compelling performances in unusual works, including: ORLANDO (1992) — Played the ageless, androgynous title role in this Sally Potter film based on the Virginia Woolf novel.
  56. How to date Virginia Woolf, Christian Science Monitor
    Your grad school professor fixes you up with Virginia Woolf on a blind date. “Report back to me with a two-page paper,” he tells you. The date does not go well. You want to quit after pre-dinner appetizers, but she insists on a five-course dinner.
  57. BBC Trust chairman’s speech to the Oxford Media Convention – full text, The Guardian
    Virginia Woolf might have thought this sort of popular success a little too, well, middlebrow, a bit (to quote her) ‘betwixt and between’. But year by year the queues grow. When the founders of the Third Programme set out to create something
  58. Ybor exhibit focuses on famous suicides, Tbo.com
    “Like Virginia Woolf; we don’t have a portrait of her in color, so her portrait is in black and white.” All the actors resemble to some extent the person they are portraying. Their interpretation of that pre-suicidal moment was gleaned through study of
  59. EDUCATION MATTERS: Reading Through The New Year, And Beyond (Part 2), Modern Ghana
    Virginia Woolf, in the chapter, “How Should One Read a Book?” (from “The Common Reader”) suggests that “Perhaps the quickest way to understand the elements of what a [writer] is doing [is] to write; to make your own experiment with the dangers and
  60. Who Runs the Literary World? These Girls!, Autostraddle
    I’m so surprised that Toni Morrison, Virginia Woolf, and Eileen Myles weren’t on this list. Radclyffe Hall, though I’m not sure if Radclyffe Hall was a trans man (zie thought all lesbians were either men trapped in women’s bodies like hirself or women
  61. Meet college student/blogger Zan Strumfeld, Albany Times Union (blog)
    This semester Disgrace by JM Coetzee and Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf stood out the most. Coetzee depicts humans at their most vulnerable stages and his writing style is just so raw and honest. Woolf blew me away with her use of free indirect
  62. Supreme Court decision on copyright may not injure major opera companies , St. Louis Beacon
    In addition to Russian composers such as Prokofiev, Shostakovich and Igor Stravinsky, the law also applied to paintings by Pablo Picasso, movies by Alfred Hitchcock and books by authors such as CS Lewis and Virginia Woolf. The case had been brought by

Modernist Commitments: Ethics, Politics and Transnational Modernism, a recently published book by Jessica Berman, has a major chapter on Virginia Woolf. That chapter, the book’s first, is titled “Intimate and Global: Ethical Domains from Woolf to Rhys.”

In an email to the VWoolf Listserv, Berman said the material may be familiar to some Woolf scholars, as “it had its genesis in a number of Woolf conference presentations and other essays.” However, she adds that she was “able to incorporate it into a broader argument about the politics of transnational modernism.”

A blurb from Jed Esty, author of Unseasonable Youth: Modernism, Colonialism, and the Fiction of Development, describes the book this way: “Berman boldly redefines the question of global modernism by zeroing in on the shared ethical dimensions of disparate modernisms. A superb, sure-footed guide to the complex relation between narrative ethics and literary politics. Berman utterly and finally debunks the myths of modernist disengagement and aesthetic individualism.”

That last statement piques my  interest, as Woolf and her colleagues are still often seen as apolitical artists and writers. You can visit the Main Book Page, the Contents Page, and read reviews or an excerpt.

The book is now being offered by Columbia University Press at a 30 percent discount. To get the discount, add the book to your shopping cart, and enter code MODBE. Click on the “apply” button and your savings will be calculated. (Paper, 384 pages, 13 illus. ISBN: 978-0-231-14951-8 $29.50; $20.65 with 30 percent discount / £20.50 in UK. e-book, $9.99)

Berman is associate professor and chair of English at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC). She is the author of Modernist Fiction, Cosmopolitanism, and the Politics of Community and the coeditor, with Jane Goldman, of Virginia Woolf Out of Bounds. She is also the co-editor, with Paul Saint-Amour, of the series Modernist Latitudes.

The fascinating second season of the PBS Masterpiece Classic series Downton Abbey is in full swing. And a couple of Woolf sightings can’t resist connecting Woolf to the show via the English country manor of lover and friend Vita Sackville-West and via World War I as presented in Mrs. Dalloway.

If you missed any episodes since the new season began on Jan. 8, you can watch them here.

  1. Not your average prof, Eastern Echo
    Though, Allen admits she’s rereading Virginia Woolf’s “Mrs. Dalloway” (as she does every year). She said, “Each time I read it, I have a different impression. I’m really looking forward to reading it in my fifties so I can relate to Mrs. Dalloway. …
  2. History in the Making, Red Pepper
    In the January round-ups few critics will fail to register 2011’s historic nature, but Mason, I’d wager, will be the only mainstream figure who’ll go so far as to propose – as Virginia Woolf once did of human character in 1910 – that in this year human
  3. Virginia Woolf: ‘Haworth expresses the Brontës; the Brontës express Haworth’, Telegraph.co.uk
    “Haworth expresses the Brontës; the Brontës express Haworth,” wrote Virginia Woolf after a visit to the village in 1904. “They fit like a snail to its shell.” Climb the steep, cobbled high street to the parsonage where the family lived and the modern
  4. A master class in telling travelers’ tales, Sunday’s Zaman
    She never emphasizes her important husband or even the fact she was writing to her famous friend, Virginia Woolf. Instead of the sneer at life we come to link with Bloomsbury, her story reveals a love for Persia, based on its remoteness and lack of
  5. From Patti Smith, Images Romantic and Morbid
    New York Times
    But there is something endearing about the famous artist who remains a fan of other artists — even if she has special access to Virginia Woolf’s bedroom or other spaces closed to the rest of us. And there is something more than just an adolescent
  6. Buyers’ attitudes – they either exhaust every option before being satisfied or , Financial Times
    As Virginia Woolf once wrote, some people are radiators and others drains – E exudes warmth. She’s looking for a home that can accommodate a family but also has that “wow” factor. She desires something kooky that can blend into many different roles:
  7. Art Preview: “Annie Leibovitz: Pilgrimage”, Washingtonian.com (blog)
    Over the course of about two years, Leibovitz traveled across America and to Europe in search of some of her own heroes: Ansel Adams, Virginia Woolf, Georgia O’Keeffe, Elvis Presley, Eleanor Roosevelt—even Sigmund Freud. She photographed their homes
  8. New work by Annie Leibovitz at American Art Museum, Washington Post (blog)
    One affecting display offers side-by-side images of Virginia Woolf’s ink-stained desk as well as the dark blue wake of River Ouse, where the author drowned herself in 1941. Elvis Presley shot his television in the 1970s.
  9. Planning a Pilgrimage with Annie Leibovitz, USA TODAY (blog)
    But her kids don’t care, she goes and sees the water and gets inspired and then she decides to go see all these other things, like Virginia Woolf’s writing studio, and multiple trips to Yosemite to try to get the same sort of Ansel Adams sky,
  10. Xpress Reviews: Nonfiction | First Look at New Books, January 20, 2012, Library Journal
    With a vintage Polaroid instant camera, Smith shoots photographs that connect her interests in literature and poetry, including images simple yet profound of objects like the slippers of Robert Mapplethorpe, the bed of Virginia Woolf, and the spoon of
  11. Patti Smith’s photographic ‘diary’ is one for devotees, The Guardian
    Among the talismanic objects she has captured on her Polaroid Land camera are Robert Graves’s hat, William Blake’s death mask and headstone, the beds of Virginia Woolf and John Keats and a pair of monogrammed slippers worn by Smith’s erstwhile muse and
  12. Court strikes wrong note on music copyright, Yakima Herald-Republic
    The New York Times has reported that the law restored copyrights in films by Alfred Hitchcock and Federico Fellini, books by CS Lewis and Virginia Woolf, and paintings by Picasso. It did the same for transformational 20th century musical composers like
  13. Sunset Series with Juliet Nicolson, Sunday Times.lk
    Later Vita returned to her husband, children and home but continued to have several affairs; most notable of those being her affair with Virginia Woolf. Juliet fondly spoke about her grandfather, Harold, and about growing up in the castle.
  14. Where the Heart Is, Cornell University The Cornell Daily Sun
    Whether in section discussing the work of Virginia Woolf, or just with friends learning of the wonder that is Nutella, I am enveloped in an unabating sense of awakening (honestly, where has Nutella been all my life? I have utterly no idea).
  15. Wired for Love, Isthmus Daily Page
    Hui’s early music group Eliza’s Toyes performed amidst the Memorial Library stacks; a recent performance of his own work involved a guided installation inspired by Virginia Woolf. “I’m not excited just by ‘exposing’ people to classical music;
  16. The Stranger in the Mirror, By Jane Shilling, The Independent
    “I don’t believe in ageing,” wrote Virginia Woolf when she hit 50. “I believe in forever altering one’s aspect to the sun.” This pragmatic approach to middle-age struck journalist Jane Shilling as a better idea than “sticking a patch on my bottom and
  17. About the books, Sacramento News & Review
    By Alison Rood Every year around January I revisit the literary journey that began with Dr. Seuss, progressed to tales about heroic dogs, and eventually—when I was in my early 20s—wound its way to Virginia Woolf, Jane Austen and George Eliot.
  18. The film list: Best of director Stephen Daldry, GoErie.com
    Daldry managed to film a supposedly unfilmable novel that spans the lives of three women in different times, all connected by Virginia Woolf’s novel, “Mrs. Dalloway.” Nicole Kidman won an Oscar for playing Woolf; the stellar cast also includes Meryl
  19. Beyond the Roaming and Rambling, The Sensitive Side of Woody Guthrie, New York Times
    And the distance between them made for moments that suggested something akin to Virginia Woolf paraphrasing Mark Twain. Even so, the lyrics for Guthrie’s sometimes mystical love songs had the same rough-hewn diction as his broadsides.
  20. Learning curve, Minneapolis Star Tribune
    They started by reading “The Waves,” a poetic 1931 novel about consciousness by the English feminist Virginia Woolf. After a lot of stops, starts and “regrouping,” they distilled their response into a two-part installation that includes a spare,
  21. Where have all the book illustrators gone?, The Independent
    You wouldn’t wish on any artist the job of drawing much of Virginia Woolf. But the possibility that illustrations could actually illumine writing and draw out elements of a narrative doesn’t seem to count for much any more. And as Posy Simmonds,
  22. Algonquin late bloomer now a Rhodes Scholar, Chicago Daily Herald
    Alexis particularly loves the modernist literature of James Joyce, TS Eliot and Virginia Woolf. “English, literature, they always made sense to me in a way that nothing else does,” she said. Naturally, English always came easy, but Alexis concedes she
  23. Public domain copyright renewable, says top US court, Sydney Morning Herald
    The law applied mainly to works first published abroad between 1923 and 1989 that had earlier not been eligible for copyright protection under US law, including films by Alfred Hitchcock and Federico Fellini, books by CS Lewis and Virginia Woolf,
  24. Meryl Streep: Is She Unbeatable for ‘Iron Lady’?, Daily Beast
    The past decade has seen actors and actresses take home trophies for their impersonations of Edith Piaf, June Carter Cash, Queen Elizabeth II, King George VI, Truman Capote, Virginia Woolf, Ray Charles, Idi Amin, and Harvey Milk.
  25. I treat writing much like a 50-hour a week job, Tehelka
    Jane Austen, Charlotte Bronte, Virginia Woolf, Dostoyevsky, Pasternak, Tolstoy, and Kafka were my touchstones then. Do Amitav and you discuss your books and take feedback from each other during the writing process? Not during the writing process.
  26. Public Domain Works Can Be Copyrighted Anew, Supreme Court Rules, New York Times
    The law applied mainly to works first published abroad from 1923 to 1989 that had earlier not been eligible for copyright protection under American law, including films by Alfred Hitchcock, books by CS Lewis and Virginia Woolf, symphonies by Prokofiev
  27. From the archive, 19 January 1929: Modern novelists under attack, The Guardian
    Discussing those writers who dealt with the “stream of consciousness,” the speaker mentioned Virginia Woolf, James Joyce and Dorothy Richardson, of whom the first was the most delicate and charming. Betraying a critical acquaintance with the works of
  28. Shelf Lives: Four Centuries of Collectors and their Books at Cambridge , Culture24
    I. There are handwritten manuscripts by John Donne and Virginia Woolf, journals from the trenches and military money from the Austrian-occupied zone of Italy, borrowed from the 10000-strong War Reserve Collection of First World War ephemera.
  29. Top 5 Parks in London, CheapOair (blog)
    Royal Botanical Gardens, Kew: A short train ride outside central London, Kew Gardens has been immortalized in the works of authors like Virginia Woolf. The park’s beautiful landscaping and world-renown glasshouses rival botanical gardens across the
  30. Wishing Ms. Woolf a happy birthday, Ridgefield Press
    Virginia Woolf Legendary British author, Virginia Woolf was born on Jan. 25, 1882. On Jan. 28, 2012 her birthday will be celebrated in a most auspicious way at the Unitarian Church in Westport, 10 Lyons Plains Road, from 12:30 to 5:30 pm Thirty actors
  31. Another Page Torn Unceremoniously From The Book, Patch.com
    Virginia Woolf.  We are the sum total of all that we’ve experienced to date; the things we’ve done; the things we’ve failed to do; the people with whom we’ve interacted; the places we’ve been; everything in our lives is a cohesive building block in the
  32. Michelle Williams, In Character Yet Again, On GQ, New York Observer
    While we don’t recall Nicole Kidman shooting any Vanity Fair covers in early 2003 dressed as Virginia Woolf, Michelle Williams is on the cover of GQ (un)dressed as Marilyn Monroe, complete with peroxidey hair. If this cover looks familiar,
  33. War poet’s playful side revealed, The Press Association
    A velvet-bound sermon book belonging to Queen Elizabeth I will share exhibition space with hand-written manuscripts by John Donne and Virginia Woolf and trench journals, produced by troops for troops while in action during the First World War.
  34. Downton Abbey and ‘the cult of the English country house’, National Post (blog)
    Anyone who reads the work of Vita Sackville-West (novelist, renowned gardener, lover of Virginia Woolf) understands the great sorrow of her life, the cruel fate that prevented her from inheriting Knole, the vast 17th-century mansion (365 rooms,
  35. The British 1 Percent: Downton Abbey Episode Two, Grantland (blog)
    The brilliance of Julian Fellowes’ accomplishment with Downton is his ability to tear pages from PBS staples Jane Austen, EM Forster, and Virginia Woolf and ball them together into a wholly original creation. The effect is not unlike what David Chase
  36. Downton Abbey bookmania, The Periscope Post
    on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque; Memoirs of an Infantry Officer by Siegfried Sasson; Regeneration by Pat Barker; Three Soldiers by John Dos Passos; Johnny Got his Gun by Dalton Trumbo; and Virginia Woolf’s Mrs Dalloway, amongst others.
  37. AcA announces new Performing Arts Residency Program, The Daily Advertiser
    This performance is inspired by a passage from Virginia Woolf’s “A Room of One’s Own.“ William and Judith imagines the relationship between William Shakespeare and his equally talented sister, Judith, who arrives in London after being disowned for
  38. Adam Gopnik., Globe and Mail
    Virginia Woolf, easily the best essayist in the English language, pulled it off, but Hugh Trevor-Roper, no slouch himself, always seemed to freeze whenever it came to writing whole books. And who now remembers William Hazlitt’s biography of Napoleon?
  39. Graphic Novels Prepub Alert: Guy Delisle, Alison Bechdel & The Graphic Cannon, Library Journal
    We’re promised a story that folds Dr. Seuss, 20th-century psychoanalyst Donald Winnicott, Virginia Woolf, childhood journals, and Bechdel’s love life into an account of the mother-daughter bond, from Bechdel’s childhood to recent years.
  40. Spotlight India, Sunday Times.lk
    Vita and Harold, two intensely creative individuals, were close friends with many members of the famous Bloomsbury Group, which included EM Forster, TS Eliot, Leonard and Virginia Woolf (with whom Vita had an affair) and other luminaries.
  41. Mallick: Why columnists should confess, Toronto Star
    Never pretend that something isn’t worth having simply because you don’t have it, Virginia Woolf once wrote. Don’t claim that Atwood’s a bad writer because she hurt you or because, like Fulford, you appeared to have soured on life.
  42. Cheer & Jeers: Joe Paterno and the Powerball on the rise, Patriot-News
    Virginia Woolf longed for a room with a view. Leena Sharif just wanted a room to pray. Surely there was a better option than sending her home. CHEERS to realestate.aol.com for its study showing that the Harrisburg area ranks ninth nationally for
  43. Nicole Kidman plays Ernest Hemingway muse in HBO biopic, Los Angeles Times
    For Kidman, there were some parallels with her portrayal of Virginia Woolf in the Academy Award-winning feature “The Hours.” “It was kind of a necessity in the journey of my career to find these women and tell their stories,” Kidman, 44, told reporters
  44. The story of the self, The Guardian
    One of the most interesting writers on memory, Virginia Woolf, shows this process in action. In her autobiographical essay, A Sketch of the Past, she tells us that one of her earliest memories is of the pattern of flowers on her mother’s dress,
  45. The case for writing letters, especially by hand, ScrippsNews
    SJ Perelman, Toulouse-Lautrec, Ernest Hemingway, Dorothy Parker, Robert Frost, Voltaire, George Bernard Shaw, Virginia Woolf, Edith Wharton, Henry James, Theodore Roosevelt and the veritable, indefatigable master of the genre, Madame de Sevigne.
  46. Shakespeare’s Sisters: Voices of English and European Women Writers, 1500-1700, PressZoom (press release)
    The exhibition title, Shakespeare’s Sisters, is inspired in part by an influential essay by Virginia Woolf. In A Room of One’s Own (1929), Woolf imagined a sister for Shakespeare called Judith, who wanted to be a playwright like her brother,
  47. Celebrating writers and their friends, Irish Times
    The series begins on January 24th with Nicholas Grene discussing Yeats and Synge; that will be followed by Amanda Piesse on Shakespeare’s same-sex friendships (January 31st); Eve Patten on Virginia Woolf and Elizabeth Bowen (February 7th);
  48. Booker High records second contest victory, Sarasota Herald-Tribune
    At this point, the Tornadoes sensed victory, but North Port refused to succumb, matching point for point as questions on refractive indexes mingled with James Thurber, Jackie Onassis, population growth and Virginia Woolf proved an exciting period of
  49. La belle Huppert, The Australian
    She played Medea at the Avignon festival in the great courtyard of the Palais des Papes, and reminds me she has acted in Hedda Gabler; Orlando, adapted from Virginia Woolf; and other dramas such as Robert Wilson’s interpretation of Quartett,

Today we have a link to a blog post sent in by a Blogging Woolf reader. It discusses Virginia Woolf’s lifelong habit of keeping a diary and how that practice has morphed into blogging for many today.

Is this a sad development or just a reality we must accept? And does the medium affect the message? Read “The Diary of Virginia Woolf and the Blogosphere” by at Blue Duets.