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Posts Tagged ‘Virginia Woolf on the Web’

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

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The most notable offering among this group of Woolf sightings is the date May 11. It marks the British Library exhibition on “British literature and place” that will include an issue of Hyde Park Gate News, the childhood newspaper written by Virginia Woolf describing a summer visit to a lighthouse. Scroll down to #10 for the link.

If you can’t make the exhibit, you can still read issues of the Stephen family newspaper. They are available in book form, edited by Gill Lowe with a foreward by Hermione Lee.

  1. Free at lastIndian Express
    On January 1, 2012, the works of James Joyce, Marina Tsvetaeva, Virginia Woolf, Rabindranath Tagore and Sherwood Anderson, among others, entered the public domain (except in certain jurisdictions). In other words, they can be freely read, …
  2. Canadians: tell Parliament to preserve Canada’s public domain!Boing Boing
     Year’s Day this year by welcoming the likes of Ernest Hemingway and Carl Jung into the public domain just as European countries were celebrating the arrival of James Joyce and Virginia Woolf, 20 years after both entered the Canadian public domain. …
  3. Grace by Esther Morgan – reviewThe Guardian
    Setting in motion a kind of archaeological excavation of the charged moment, this poetry can call to mind Elizabeth Bishop and the prose of Virginia Woolf – though, oddly, there can be an absence of detail in Morgan’s writing. …
  4. 12 for ’12: The Most Anticipated Books of the YearNational Post
    A debut novel from a former nominee for the Bronwen Wallace Award for Emerging Writers and one of Knopf’s New Faces of Fiction, Magnified World starts with a nod to Virginia Woolf, as a mother fills her pockets with stones and drowns herself in the Don …
  5. The Death of the Heart (Modern Library #84)Reluctant Habits
    There’s some truth to the notion that Elizabeth Bowen may very well be the missing link between Virginia Woolf’s stream-of-consciousness and Iris Murdoch’s masterful fusing of behavioral study and philosophy. Yet as I’ve intimated above, …
  6. ‘Iron Lady’ star Meryl Streep has a way of forging her pathLong Beach Press-Telegram
    In “Adaptation,” she’s the fantasy version of a deranged screenwriter, and in “The Hours” she’s a woman whose life is affected by Virginia Woolf’s novel “Mrs. Dalloway.” ANGELS IN AMERICA: In the 2003 HBO miniseries based on the play by Tony Kushner, …
  7. Movie makeovers help actresses capture the magicUSA TODAY
    An unrecognizable Nicole Kidman bagged an Oscar for playing Virginia Woolf in 2002’s The Hours. A year later, an equally transformed Charlize Theron won the same award for playing an unsightly killer in Monster. And let’s not forget sparkly Marion …
  8. Six Actors Who Actually Look Like the Famous People They PortrayedPW-Philadelphia Weekly
    Erin Brockovich doesn’t look like Julia Roberts, Virginia Woolf didn’t look like Nicole Kidman and Salvador Dalí looked nothing like Robert Pattison. That said, apply the right makeup to Meryl Streep and she’ll look like Margaret Thatcher, …
  9. A New Chapter begins for Le Cordon Bleu London School of Culinary Arts at PR Web (press release)
    Several members of the group lived in the area in the early decades of the 20th century, including biographer Lytton Strachey and novelist Virginia Woolf. The building features state-of-the-art kitchen and classroom facilities offering students the…
  10. Literary events in 2012The Guardian
    … JG Ballard’s handwritten manuscripts; the “suppressed” chapter from Wind in the Willows; a childhood newspaper written by Virginia Stephen (Woolf) describing a summer visit to a lighthouse and manuscripts of the Brontës, including Jane Eyre. …
  11. Gigantic summer movie quizHerald Sun
    Which Australian played the ill-fated novelist Virginia Woolf in the 2003 movie The Hours? 2. In which 2004 movie did Harry Potter discover that a dangerous wizard named Sirius Black had escaped from Azkaban prison? 3. Which 1944 movie, based on an …
  12. Alexis M. Smith finds a Portland publisher for her Portland novelOregonLive.com
    Smith is a huge fan of Virginia Woolf’s “Mrs. Dalloway” and was influenced by Woolf’s use of the present as a point of reference for the past. “It’s very poetic,” Montgomery says. “Alexis is such an elegant writer. She’s really got the soul of a poet….
  13. Because they have a VoiceIndian Express
    Virginia Woolf’s unforgettable words, “For most of history, Anonymous was a woman”, became directional for Polish theatre director Marta Górnicka. They echoed cultural stereotypes about femininity. “There doesn’t exist a language which belongs to women …
  14. Kate Bolick: why modern women don’t marryTelegraph.co.uk
    Her flat is softly feminine, with floor-to-ceiling bookshelves stuffed with novels, including authors such as Virginia Woolf and Rousseau. A well-worn copy of Eleanor Roosevelt’s On My Own sits on a side table. I ask her why she thinks her article has…
  15. Louise Doughty novelIran Book News Agency
    Ghojaloo is the translator of well-known works such as Virginia Woolf’s “Woman in the Mirror” and “Orlando”, Malcolm Bradbury’s books on novel, and Susan Sontag’s “Alice in Bed”. “Stone Cradle” penned by Louise Doughty is converted into Persian by…
  16. Tilda Swinton on Virginia Woolf’s OrlandoTelegraph.co.uk
    When Tilda Swinton first discovered Virginia Woolf’s ‘Orlando’, she embraced it as a practical guide to living. Fifteen years later she played the gender-hopping hero on screen. Now, as a new edition is published, the actress maps the obsessions behind…
  17. Parallel Points of Light Ricochet Across TimeNew York Times
    They represent what Virginia Woolf called “moments of being,” in this case in the unremarkable existences of William Rivington and Caroline Carpenter, two people who never knew each other but appear to have resided in the same corner of England at ...
  18. Beverly Ford Food for thoughtFrederick News Post (subscription)
    If one believes, as the English novelist Virginia Woolf did, that “One cannot think well, love well, sleep well, if one has not dined well,” what one eats may be an important area of resolve for 2012. Beverly Ford of Walkersville is a retiree and …
  19. I Was a Teenage Samuel Beckett: Or, My Literary Biography ProblemTIME
    I became obsessed with biographies of Sylvia Plath, and then Virginia Woolf, and then Evelyn Waugh. These were serious scholarly works, but to me they were porn for a wannabe novelist. (Plath’s life is pure incandescent ecstasy and agony. …
  20. Denis O’Hare and Lisa Peterson to Lead AN ILIAD at New York Theatre WorkshopBroadway World
    At NYTW Lisa Peterson has directed numerous productions, including Light Shining in Buckinghamshire for which she won an OBIE award, and The Waves, which she adapted from Virginia Woolf’s novel of the same title with David Bucknam and which received …
  21. The infamous C-wordOUPblog (blog)
    The protagonist in Virginia Woolf’s Orlando fainted at seeing a woman’s ankle. Keep reading and don’t faint. Words for the genitals and sexual activities have always been tabooed, but not necessarily out of prudery. Throughout history people have …
  22. My First Job: Toy SalesmanSo So Gay
    What I’d really wanted to do was mooch around Waterstone’s all summer, binge-reading Virginia Woolf and flicking my fringe at customers, but my mum wanted me out of the house and had sold a fitted kitchen to the toy store manager so ultimately I was …

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It’s the end of the year, so we have lots of Woolf sightings connecting her to the literature of 2011. That is to be expected.

But this week we also have a quirky one linking her to a pop song about swimming/suicide in Malibu. That one is a stretch for anyone who knows Woolf. And there are legitimate mentions of a recent acquisition by the Metropolitan Museum of Art of Man Ray papers, ephemera, and portraits of Woolf.

See number 10 for the Malibu connection and numbers 37 and 38 for the Man Ray news.

  1. The dark heart of Dickens: How writer was an abusive husband who seduced a Daily Mail
    To Leslie Stephen, the father of the novelist Virginia Woolf, he could be counted a success only if you defined the term as being admired by hordes of ‘half-educated’ people. No, there are flaws in his novels. They were written episodically, 
  2. David Milch will tackle William Faulkner’s works for HBOLos Angeles Times
    (Could an adaptation vivify the work, Hobson wonders, the way “The Hours” — filtered through a Michael Cunningham novel — did a Virginia Woolf novel?) Some writers have wish lists: Salman Rushdie told Slate he was hoping for a new “Sanctuary” and…
  3. Our history – Part 2Standard Speaker
    Many authors have written about their recollections: Updike, Kerouac, Annie Dillard, Bellow and Virginia Woolf to name a few. In Travels with Charley, Steinbeck reminisces about his hometown, Salinas, California, wondering what’s happened to his …
  4. Economic Independence: Bedrock of FreedomThe Moral Liberal
    In 1929 the English writer Virginia Woolf inserted a famous phrase into feminist history: “a room of one’s own.” The main theme of her extended essay by this name is that “a woman must have money and a room of her own if she is to write fiction” or, 
  5. A Year in Reading: Buzz PooleThe Millions
    This year, in terms of paying homage to the canon, I finally got around to reading some Virginia Woolf. I know, I know, late to the party on this one, but at least I made it. The careening interior monologues of Mrs. Dalloway serve as a prescient …
  6. The publishing year: editors’ wishes and missesThe Guardian
    After splitting up with her boyfriend and her job, and with Virginia Woolf as her presiding spirit, Laing walks the 42 miles of the river Ouse in Sussex (where Woolf drowned herself in 1941). A reflection on nature and solitude that twists and turns 
  7. Has ‘free wi-fi’ sucked the life out of coffeehouses?Sacramento Bee (blog)
    Hemingway, Pound, Virginia Woolf, Fitzgerald. Even a bearded William Faulkner hit up Paris for a time. (A great book about this era, by the way, is by Morley Callaghan called “That Summer in Paris.”) Before the current wave – or third wave – of …
  8. Articles in creative writingSeven Days
    Later, after convincing Darla to wait for us in the pickup, Connors pulled out some black-and-white pictures of the actual Virginia Woolf. “I pulled these off the internet and printed them out. Are you online?” I glared at him. 
  9. Kate Winslet finds delight in CarnageThe Province
    … self-righteousness that is one of the hallmarks of upscale Brooklyn neighborhoods, the film chronicles in real time the couples’ downward spiral as polite overtures give way to Scotch-and-cobbler-fueled invective — a sort of “Virginia Woolf lite. …
  10. The Music Club, 2011, Slate Magazine
    But I’m mesmerized by the contrasts between the lilting melody, the propulsive rhythm, and the suicidal tendencies of “Swim Good,” with its

    Video of "Swim Good" on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PmN9rZW0HGo

    Virginia Woolf-in-Malibu scenario. No wonder Ocean got tapped for Watch the Throne—Ye and Jay understand,…

  11. How Economic Freedom Saved Wendy McElroyMen’s News Daily
    (The “room of one’s own” remark is a reference to the book by Virginia Woolf.): I once needed a room of my own. And I know on a personal level how laws can harm those they intend to protect. I ran away from home at 16 years old because the streets were …
  12. Holiday gift pick: ‘Pilgrimage’ by Annie LeibovitzphillyBurbs.com (blog)
    She photographed Virginia Woolf’s writing table, Emily Dickinson’s only surviving dress, and Freud’s final couch. The photographs are mesmerizing and give viewers an intimate glance into the spaces of important historical figures. …
  13. Annie Leibovitz: Pilgrimage, Hamiltons Gallery – reviewEvening Standard
    With no agenda and no commissions, she headed for the people, places and associated objects which inspired and shaped her life and tastes – from Elvis to Abraham Lincoln, Charles Darwin to Virginia Woolf. The exhibition’s 28 small, carefully printed …
  14. Photographer Annie Leibovitz gets more personal with ‘Pilgrimage’Las Vegas Review-Journal (blog)
    Leibovitz made trips to the homes of her favorite authors, including Emily Dickinson, Virginia Woolf, Louisa May Alcott, Emerson and Thoreau. She photographed a beautiful white dress of Dickinson’s, highlighting the details in what at first seems to be …
  15. Annie Leibovitz and Tina Brown on Pilgrimage, Photography and Vanity FairDaily Beast
    I never would have been drawn to [VirginiaWoolf if not for her.” Pilgrimage is a glimpse into what fascinates the legendary photographer. The collection reveals as much about process—“This is like a note-taking of my other work,” she said, 
  16. Writers at Work, Seeking a SparkWall Street Journal
    In “Dancing With Mrs. Dalloway”—the title refers to Virginia Woolf’s novel and people who inspired some of the characters—some of the literary back-stories presented are familiar; others, less so. Most readers will be aware that “Alice’s Adventures 
  17. The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, Twilight, and the Return of Women’s …Huffington Post
    … lives and their complex characters figured in the birth of the modern novel, from Samuel Richardson’s Clarissa to Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice, Gustave Flaubert’s Madame Bovary, Leo Tolstoy’s Anna Karenina, and Virginia Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway. …
  18. Martin Robinson: So you want to be a millionaire?New Zealand Herald
    Virginia Woolf could only afford to become a full-time writer after she inherited money from her aunt, who was killed in a horse riding accident in India. Relatives can also drag you down, so be careful about lending them money. 6. No luck in NZ? …
  19. Book World: Heller McAlpin reviews Alexandra Harris’s “Virginia Woolf”Washington Post
    As Alexandra Harris aptly notes in her appealing, smartly written overview of the life, work and legacy of Virginia Woolf, “The telescope as well as the microscope has its role.” Harris, a young, Oxford-educated cultural historian who made a name for …
  20. Why is incest all over prime time?, Salon
    Mary Jean Corbett, author of “Family Likeness: Sex, Marriage, and Incest From Jane Austen to Virginia Woolf,” writes in an email, “Incest tropes always test the bounds of what’s ‘natural,’ and in a time where there’s a fairly strong effort to ..
  21. Wanna Be Famous? Science Says Get There By Age 30Forbes
    For instance, the 1882 cohort includes Virginia Woolf and Felix Frankfurter; the 1946 one includes Steven Spielberg and Bill Clinton. In every year, there is a similar trend, with half of the famous people getting that way by relatively young age, …
  22. Winter reads: The Snow Goose by Paul GallicoThe Guardian
    Only 15 years separate this novella from that other slim novel set in the searching beam of a lighthous, but Gallico makes no attempts at Virginia Woolf’s interiority: “She paused, and again Rhayader must have thought of the wild water birds caught …
  23. Primakov in Concert, Vol. 2 = MENDELSSOHN, BACH, GLASS & DEBUSSY – BridgeAudiophile Audition
    The story investigates the effect of Virginia Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway influencing various characters’ tendency to self-destruction. Repetitive and haunted, the suite captures the opening suicide-note scene, rife with melancholy and doom. 
  24. American playwright uses Russian language to say what can’t be said, Russia Beyond The Headlines
    In 1999, Metzler spent a year at Oxford University, where she had the opportunity to study two women writers for an entire academic year—Akhmatova and Virginia Woolf. “I love Akhmatova, her poems are so economic and precise. She bore witness to horror …
  25. Interview: Lucy Wood, author of Diving BellesThe List
    I wish Virginia Woolf had lived longer, so that she might have been able to write more books. What one thing would you change about the publishing world? I don’t really have enough experience of the publishing world to be able to suggest any changes. …
  26. Eonomic Independence: Bedrock of FreedomThe Moral Liberal
    In 1929 the English writer Virginia Woolf inserted a famous phrase into feminist history: “a room of one’s own.” The main theme of her extended essay by this name is that “a woman must have money and a room of her own if she is to write fiction” or, …
  27. A Year in Reading: Buzz PooleThe Millions
    This year, in terms of paying homage to the canon, I finally got around to reading some Virginia Woolf. I know, I know, late to the party on this one, but at least I made it. The careening interior monologues of Mrs. Dalloway serve as a prescient 
  28. The publishing year: editors’ wishes and missesThe Guardian
    After splitting up with her boyfriend and her job, and with Virginia Woolf as her presiding spirit, Laing walks the 42 miles of the river Ouse in Sussex (where Woolf drowned herself in 1941). A reflection on nature and solitude that twists and turns …
  29. Freaks, Poets Compete in Paris Shows of Arbus, Freund: ReviewBusinessWeek
    The sitters include Andre Gide, Jean Cocteau, Colette, Jean-Paul Sartre, Andre Malraux, James Joyce and Virginia Woolf. To give you an idea of the literary world in the 1930s the organizers have reproduced the facades of the bookshops where Freund 
  30. A Year in Reading: Garth Risk HallbergThe Millions
    You won’t catch me saying this often, but I think Virginia Woolf and VS Pritchett missed the boat on this one. Galsworthy’s style — his “port-wine irony,” as Pritchett puts it — looks pretty tasty a hundred years later, when the cultural palate tends …
  31. Picking the best books of the past yearAustin American-Statesman
    The novella is making a comeback, and the festival suggests Melville House’s series “The Art of the Novella,” focusing on obscure works by writers such as Virginia Woolf, Edith Wharton and others. Check out the full list at …
  32. Life is filled with holesTelegraph-Journal (registration)
    But it is also akin to Virginia Woolf’s A Room of One’s Own. The resonances are many and personal. They are also deliciously surprising and rewarding. s Michael W. Higgins is vice-president for mission and Catholic identity at Sacred Heart University, 
  33. Music Weekly podcast: Best albums of 2011The Guardian (blog)
    Kitty goes on to say that her image is “incredible” and that she does the “Virginia Woolf thing so well”. I wonder what the Virginia Woolf Thing might be. Let’s not even get started on how on earth, does Virginia Woolf have to do with (any)thing. …
  34. The Exploding Boy and Other Tiny Tales by Nick Parker – reviewThe Guardian
    Self-publishing and DIY authors include, famously, William Blake, Lord Byron, Proust, Shelley, Ezra Pound, Walt Whitman, Gertrude Stein and Virginia Woolf. But the world of self-publishing is mostly inhabited by cranks and hucksters (though Blake, …
  35. Christopher Hitchens and a lifetime of languageWashington Post (blog)
    He had a profound knowledge of English literature, from AAMilne to Virginia Woolf. At the same time he had a profound experience of the world – he had been to Macedonia himself, several times – as well as a sense of humor so dry you could hear it crack 
  36. Standouts in a Solo SettingNew York Times
    She radiated honesty and emotion in songs by Porpora, Mahler, Ravel and — fabulously — Dominick Argento (his cycle “From the Diary of Virginia Woolf”). IAN BOSTRIDGE At Carnegie last month this English tenor paced, grimaced, growled and soared …
  37. Photographs and ephemera enhance the Getty’s unparalleled collections on Man RayArt Daily
    The agendas are joined by 51 vintage and modern photographic prints by Man Ray, dating from the 1920s to the 1970s, of prominent people including TS Eliot, James Joyce, Elsa Schiaparelli,Virginia Woolf, Paul Eluard, and Marcel Duchamp on his death bed …
  38. Sculpture as Portrait at the MetropolitanNew York Times
    Also included are 51 Man Ray photographs of prominent writers and artists like TS Eliot, James Joyce and Virginia Woolf. The acquisition also includes several objects Man Ray created, like a cigar box transformed into a New Year’s greeting card, …
  39. Domestic labourThe Economist
    The life of Virginia Woolf, from 1882 to 1941, bracketed the period of the Servant Problem. Her mother, Julia, had married in 1867 and set up home with cook, kitchenmaids, housemaid, parlourmaid, lady’s maid, nurse, nursemaid and gardener. ..
  40. Bloomberg New Contemporaries Find Its Legs At ICAArtLyst
    As Virginia Woolf claimed of books, perhaps so with works of art; ‘If they need shoring up by a preface here, an introduction there, they have no more right to exist than a table that needs a wad of paper under one leg in order to stand steady. …
  41. Sally’s keys to success, Sydney Star Observer
    Whitwell said the “lovely lesbians” from The Hunger will also feature on the album, as well as some Virginia Woolf in the form of Philip Glass’ soundtrack from The Hours. “I’m doing more Philip Glass because I couldn’t help myself. …
  42. Books: Review – Now All Roads Lead to France by Matthew HollisIslington Tribune newspaper website
    We must be grateful that he has left us his powerful verse. • Dr Jean Moorcroft Wilson is a lecturer at London University and biographer of Siegfried Sassoon, Isaac Rosenberg, Charles Hamilton Sorley and Virginia Woolf. Edward Thomas.
  43. Canucks respond to lazy Bolland insults with equally lazy insultsYahoo! Sports (blog)
    Did you know Virginia Woolf once called Ulysses “the work of a queasy undergraduate scratching his pimples”? I assure you nothing I’m about to report can touch that. Let’s start on the gentle end, as Mike Gillis had his say during an interview on …
  44. Nicole Kidman Hangs with Herald Reporter in Starbucks, No Big DealBoston Herald
    I don’t know what they’re doing back in Boston. They had previously been here so Keith could have surgery on his throat at MGH, so I’m thinking maybe they returned for a checkup. Either way, Nicole KIDMAN! aka Virginia Woolf in The Hours! …
  45. Magic Mountain view … Davos in Switzerland, where the sanatorium that The Guardian
    This is a novel mystifyingly overlooked by Virginia Woolf in her 1926 essay On Being Ill, in which she bemoans literature’s failure to make illness one of its “prime themes” alongside “love and battle and jealousy.” Well, here illness is decidedly …
  46. Cuba’s Vanito Brown and His ‘Havana in Full Color’, Havana Times
    It makes one think of that excellent novel by Virginia Woolf (The Waves), in which its characters are ruled by something (super) natural that they themselves defined as “waves.” Later Vanito croons the most beautiful and representative phrase of the …
  47. Real People, Made-Up StoriesWall Street Journal (blog)
    Michael Cunningham’s ‘reanimation’ of Virginia Woolf in his book “The Hours,” was the focus of some criticism. There are two conflicting schools of thought about novelists using real people as characters; I agree with both of them. On the one hand,…
  48. Jane Smiley: Writers Need Community More Than They Need SolitudeSF Weekly (blog)
    She talked with us about enjoying the process, how living in Iowa supported her writing, and Shakespeare and Virginia Woolf’s community. In the book, you talk about how important community is for writers. Is the idea of a writer needing solitude still …
  49. A Year in Reading: Mona SimpsonThe Millions
    George Eliot and Virginia Woolf preferred it to Jane Eyre, while Thackeray couldn’t quite forgive Bronte for besetting her heroine two suitors to contend with, the first of whom does not love her, the second of whom is crabby. Once we accept the crabby …

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Was Woolf a certified foodie? I think not. Did she say, “It’s all good. Just go with it”? Not bloody likely. But those are two of the Woolf sightings among the 55 below.

This portrait of Julia Jackson, Woolf's mother, is up for sale.

  1. Oaks hot travel deals for foodies!e-Travel Blackboard (press release)
    Renowned writer and devoted ‘foodie’, Virginia Woolf once quoted, “One cannot think well, love well, sleep well, if one has not dined well”. With this in mind, Oaks Hotels & Resorts offer passionate foodies a choice of 3 indulgent packages. 
  2. Novel challenge for 50kSunLive (blog)
    Virginia Woolf reckoned it was ‘the critic in the corner’ who stopped you from producing. What you put down on the page had to be good enough to justify the time and energy spent on it. Literary writing teaches us to write consciously and …
  3. Bow to god of ‘tolerance’ or elseTown Hall
    After seeing a quasi-shrine that had been erected at her school, honoring Harvey Milk, Neil Patrick Harris, and Virginia Woolf for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History month, Knox expressed disapproval of “homosexuality based on her …
  4. The Media’s Sexualization of Female Athletes: A Bad Call for the Modern GameStudent Pulse
    Modernist feminist Virginia Woolf contends that women should earn just “enough to be independent of any other human being and to buy that modicum of health, leisure, knowledge and so on that is needed for the full development of body and mind” (80). …
  5. Bonhams to sell Julia Margaret Cameron’s intimate image of Virginia Woolf’s Art Daily
    Jackson had four children with Stephen, including Vanessa (Bell) and Virginia (Woolf), who immortalised her mother as Mrs Ramsay in her 1927 novel To the Lighthouse. Another sale highlight is The Merce Cunningham Dance Company Photography Portfolio 
  6. WOLFETTE – Trophy Girl – Released 5th December 2011Altsounds.com
    Part English rose, part fiery Thai, and a distant relative of Virginia Woolf, Wolfette is set to release her new track Trophy Girl: A euphoric, uplifting song of freedom. Wolfette breaks out of her cage, escaping from a controlling relationship. …
  7. Florence’s Dark Side of FameNewsweek
    “What the Water Gave Me” is plainly inspired by Virginia Woolf’s suicide. On another track she sings rhapsodically about “the arms of the ocean, so sweet and so cold.” She tells me she’s always been sort of fascinated by water, and clips drowning 
  8. Florence and the Machine’s Hackney Empire gig was ‘dramatic and thrilling’Metro
    With references Frida Kahlo and Virginia Woolf thrown in for good measure, the song was like a much darker version of a Bat For Lashes song full of drama, foreboding and passion. Florence channeled her inner gospel chanteuse in the bluesy Lover To …
  9. ‘Difficult’ second album? We just went with the FloDaily Mail

    Florence And the Machine

    Joan Of Arc crops up on Only If For A Night, while What The Water Gave Me ruminates on the suicide of author Virginia Woolf. If it all sounds a little depressing, it isn’t. The music is too vibrant for gloom to set in. Even when she misses the point, ..

  10. Florence and the Machine mine the sweet sounds of homeGlobe and Mail
    During our conversation, Welch manages to work in references to both Virginia Woolfand Frida Kahlo, revealing a bookish side that’s no surprise given her cool-meets-clever genetic history – she’s the daughter of an academic mother (a professor of …
  11. Florence And The Machine – CeremonialsThe Yorker
    ‘What the Water Gave Me’ doesn’t just hint at the death of Virginia Woolf, it explains her chosen method. “Let the only sound be the overflow / pockets full of stones”, Welch half sings, half chants in her haunting chorus; Woolf did indeed fill her …
  12. Shaped by reading materialNew Zealand Herald
    Film and art may continue to be the most common cultural influences on fashion, but it is the impact of literature that has always intrigued me. The idea of a genuine interpretation of a writer’s portrayal rather …
  13. Woman joked of overdosing, trial toldStuff.co.nz Peter Borrie, this morning told the court of the rapid deterioration in his patient, as well as her “tongue in cheek” comments regarding her desire to overdose on tablets left to her by her late husband, or drown like author Virginia Woolf
  14. Holiday Inn gives serenity in the big cityNorthampton Chronicle & Echo
    The Holiday Inn is situated in a picturesque area with streets full of large terraced houses lived in by famous literary figures such as Virginia Woolf, George Bernard Shaw and Arthur Rimbaud. Once inside the hotel we were greeted by friendly and …
  15. The Woman of Wax” travels to IranIran Book News Agency
    Her role in the Spanish literature of late 20th century is comparable to the role of Virginia Woolf to her contemporary world. The key to Gaite’s success is her tone and point of view. Carmen never speaks from the seat of scholarly power, never infuses …
  16. How Do We Repair the Souls of Those Returning from Iraq?Huffington Post (blog)
    In Mrs. Dalloway, Virginia Woolf portrayed the suicidal anguish of Septimus Smith as if she were a veteran herself. Tyler notes: She was just a writer. That tells me, if nothing else, that the information was there. The capacity to know existed. …
  17. James Wolcott on the Life of a CriticSlate Magazine (blog)
    For some reason, the elegant retort “If doing criticism didn’t cost Henry James,Virginia Woolf, DH Lawrence, and John Updike any candlepower, what makes you think you’re too good for it, buster?” never seems to stick. Journalistic critics such as…
  18. Carnegie International curators to offer updatePittsburgh Post Gazette
    The exhibit theme comes from two literary works about women’s creativity: Virginia Woolf’s essay “A Room of One’s Own,” in which the author argues the necessity of a private room and financial independence, and Alice Walker’s “In Search of Our Mothers’ …
  19. Why child-free still trumps child-friendlyIndependent Online
    And even though I do the grocery shopping, walk the dogs, have un-massaged feet and know where the doodat is, I like my husband just as he is – even if he thinksVirginia Woolf is a character from True Blood. More than that, I like us just the way we …
  20. Local wins Rhodes ScholarshipThe Ashburton Guardian
    He is interested in women writers, including Sylvia Plath, Virginia Woolf and Janet Frame. “Women’s writing has historically been writing out of the experience of being oppressed and how to navigate and use the language of the oppressor, the dominant …
  21. ‘The Raven’ to creep into theatersWestern Courier (subscription)
    “The Hours,” based on Virginia Woolf’s life and famous novel “Mrs. Dalloway,” was nominated for numerous Academy Awards. On the other hand, “Becoming Jane” (based on Jane Austen) and “Sylvia” (based on Sylvia Plath), fell short and were both soon …
  22. From Stage to ScreenCU Columbia Spectator
    An initial clue, of course, lies in production companies’ endless quest to line their pockets: when Jack Warner bought the film rights to Virginia Woolf, it was the toast of Broadway, an especially lucrative seat-filler he hoped could pack countrywide 
  23. Mary Hamer wins Virginia Prize for FictionThe Bookseller
    Kipling and Trix entwines the life of the famous writer with that of his sister Trix. The Virginia Prize for Fiction was created in 2009 to mark 20 years of publishing at Aurora Metro, and is a biennial award for women, named in honour of Virginia Woolf.
  24. CHARLES DICKENS: A LIFE BY CLAIRE TOMALIN (Viking £30)Daily Mail
    People have always found it easy to sneer at Charles Dickens – for example, Sir Leslie Stephen (Virginia Woolf’s father) opined: ‘If literary fame could safely be measured by popularity among the half-educated, Dickens must claim the highest position …
  25. PLAY REVIEW: Next Stage, Cary Anne Spear present strong ‘Year’Centre Daily Times
    Her style is quite reminiscent of the later works of Virginia Woolf in that she moves effortlessly back and forth through time as her story unfolds. Didion not only tells us about whom she loses, but what she loses: this “what” is her beloved ..
  26. Faust (1926)A.V. Club
    If I want to see Virginia Woolf’s, I can simply go to YouTube. But while Dec. 28, 1895, when the Lumiere brothers held the first public exhibition of their films, marked a turning point in how we look at the world, it didn’t erase the past, ..
  27. How the British came to love PicassoSpectator.co.uk (blog)
    Virginia Woolf and Vanessa Bell’s correspondence recalls how the painter and curator Clive Bell took Picasso shopping in Savile Row to dress the dishevelled continental as an English gentleman; Picasso was said to favour the English bowler hat above ..
  28. Elizabeth I on screenMovies.ie
    The film, based on a novel by Virginia Woolf, tells the story of an immortal named Orlando who starts life as an Elizabethan nobleman. Queen Elizabeth commands Orlando never to fade and never to grow old, and over 300 years he transforms from man to …
  29. Republicans have turned into right royal snobsThe Australian
    So Self is only echoing Leonard Woolf, husband of Virginia and member of the achingly arty Bloomsbury Group, who complained in 1937 that “an intense propaganda campaign” had managed to “establish in the people a superstitious loyalty towards the royal …
  30. Morphoses in “The Bacchae” suffers from anemiaThe Star-Ledger – NJ.com
    As Virginia Woolf understood, these passions acquire their shrillness from a life lived in the open air. Yet Woolf also noted in her essay “On Not Knowing Greek” that among the tragedians Euripides is the oblique, psychological one—the one who can be …
  31. This column will change your life: inspirational quotesThe Guardian
    Fear does keep us small; living at your fullest takes guts. None of this needs a fake Mandela attribution to be worth absorbing. So you like a new-age writer’s insights? So what? As Virginia Woolf famously put it: “It’s all good. Just go with it. …
  32. Jeanette Winterson: all about my motherThe Guardian
    … write about “experience” – the compass of what they know – while men write wide and bold, the big canvas, the experiment with form: Jane Austen’s famous two inches of ivory; the domestic, interior worlds of Emily Dickinson and Virginia Woolf. …
  33. Who’s Afraid of 7 Billion? The Anti-Human Left, That’s WhoOpenMarket.org
    So even though it’s Halloween, I’m not afraid of 7 billion (though Virginia Woolf terrifies me). I say, to whoever that lucky number 7 is, welcome to Planet Earth. Maybe one day you will invent something that improves all our lives, and if so, …
  34. Toast When We Coast & Drink When We Stink: Week 8Dawg Sports
    Where You Can Get Your Hands On It: It doesn’t matter what kind of booze you buy… just buy a lot of it. Nothing else matters. As always, I look forward to reading your post-game celebration/Virginia Woolf-esque coping plans in the comments section. …
  35. The ‘sexy’ curse: Why are women so rubbish at Halloween?MyDaily UK
    I hope a few will break the mould and channel sexy Virginia Woolf, a sexy smelly old gym sock and sexy inexplicable melancholy. I realise this all sounds a bit Mary Whitehouse but it’s not that I am prudish about women wanting to look sexy; …
  36. Virginia Woolf, By Alexandra HarrisThe Independent
    Another biography of Virginia Woolf might seem about as necessary as the prosthetic nose that Nicole Kidman donned to play the writer. What’s left to add? This volume doesn’t arrive with a fanfare of new revelations, nor does it have a particular …

    A screen shot of Patti Smith's photo of Virginia Woolf's bed

  37. Patti Smith: “Camera Solo” Photo Exhibit Gently InspiresNeon Tommy
    Music was interspersed between carefully selected poems and prose by Rimbaud,Virginia Woolf and William Blake whom are also paid homage in the exhibit. Smith photographed Woolf’s cane in one photo and a stone from the river where she died in another. …
  38. A Pilgrim’s ProgressNew York Times
    She took her camera to Virginia Woolf’s house, photographing the surface of her writing table, and into her garden, capturing the wide, roiling water of the River Ouse, in which Woolf drowned herself. She photographed Dr. Freud’s sumptuously carpeted …
  39. To Be Anon…About – News & Issues
    In 1929, Virginia Woolf would speculate in A Room of One’s Own: “I would venture to guess thatAnon, who wrote so many poems without signing them, was often a woman.” In the case of Sense and Sensibility at least, Woolf was decidedly right on target.
  40. David Huddle: The life on the insideBurlingtonFreePress.com
    I guess Virginia Woolf was one of the first great practitioners of the interior life. Carver, his people are quite often down-and-out working-class people. Most of the ones he writes about most movingly have drinking problems. …
  41. Fiery Feminist Virginia Woolf – LGBT History MonthCare2.com (blog)
    Day 30′s LGBT History Month icon, Virginia Woolf, had a very different life and career from Day 7′s icon, Rita Mae Brown. But both have influenced feminism and literature. By the time Virginia Woolf burst onto the London literary …
  42. Feminism: the Indian contextThe Hindu
    When one thinks of feminism, the names that come to one’s mind readily are Virginia Woolf, Simone de Beauvoir, Adrienne Rich, and Elaine Showalter, since the growth of feminism is usually attributed to western influence. True, these spokeswomen set …
  43. Theater review: ‘Twelfth Night’ at A Noise WithinLos Angeles Times
    As Virginia Woolf famously argued, creative beings need a room of their own. ANW now has a 33000-square-foot complex, complete with a comfortable 283-seat theater and enough room to house its expansive administrative and educational operation, ..
  44. Friends of Dorothy: How Gay Was My Oz?Huffington Post (blog)
    Well, I do subscribe to EM Forster’s dictum, “Only connect,” but I also live by a lesser known suggestion of Virginia Woolf’s: “Only suggest.” So I know what I believe, but in prose I only suggested a little bit about the tendresse — even once when …
  45. Joely Richardson on Anonymous, Playing Elizabeth and the Trouble With GreenscreenMovieline
    Next? I don’t know. I did, in a docudrama, play Virginia Woolf; I’d like another crack at her down the line, just because she’s such a fascinating woman. — just in terms of her mind. But… That’s all that’s coming to me right now!
  46. Regent’s Park’s Superprime Property, Spear’s WMS
    Virginia Woolf wrote in her diaries that ‘there is no doubt that the greatest happiness in the world is walking through Regent’s Park on a green, but wet — green but red pink and blue evening’. In an essay entitled London, 1940, Elizabeth Bowen wrote …
  47. AUDITIONS: Would you like to be in a film with Naomi Watts? Here’s how!Naples Daily News (blog)
    I guess I left the post in “draft” mode when I literally ran out the door headed to Sanibel to see “Virginia Woolf.” I only noticed today. I seriously apologize. Anyway. You still have two days to email for an appointment to the casting session for a …
  48. She Who Dares: The Astonishing Work Of Tilda SwintonHuffington Post
    His/her lifelong quest is to discover the purest, most powerful love; that search spans centuries and continents in this adaptation of Virginia Woolf’s famous novel. Swinton’s breakthrough turn as the androgynous Orlando is reason enough to see this …
  49. VIDEO: Equality Forum seeking nominations for 2012 LGBT History Month iconsSan Diego Gay & Lesbian News
    This year’s icons included people like Don’t Ask Don’t Tell activist Dan Choi; composer AaronCopland; pop star Lady Gaga; and author Virginia Woolf. Equality Forum spotlights one icon per day each October on its LGBT History Month web site. …
  50. Last Man StandingA.V. Club (blog)
    Meanwhile, Mandi works on her college application essays, trying to focus long enough to crank out something about how much she loves Virginia Woolf. Except it was Kristin who wrote that, obviously, as she realizes that having Boyd didn’t mean her …
  51. Seven fashion book ideas for ChristmasScotsman
    … to the abstract sculptures of Donald Judd in the 1960s, who called his work: “the simple expression of complex thought,” to Japanese culture and the concept of Zen, via philosophical absolutism, architecture, even the literature of Virginia Woolf. ..
  52. Alan Hollinghurst’s ‘The Stranger’s Child’ is a masterpiece about gay life and …Plain Dealer
    It’s Oscar Wilde and AE Housman, EM Forster and Virginia Woolf and the entireBloomsbury set (name checked extensively in the book), a history — as Cecil’s is — of invisibility, secrecy and scandal, bowdlerization, censure and frenetic posthumous …
  53. WOMAN OF SUBSTANCE: URBAN LEGENDHaute Living
    Mrs. Weston’s love for art began at an early age while reading about the Bloomsbury Group, a series of young writers and artists in England between the wars such asVirginia Woolf and EM Forster. The first painting she acquired was by Augustine Brown, …
  54. Despite Reflexive Humor, Eugenides’s Tired ‘Plot’ DisappointsHarvard Crimson
    “Is it Virginia Woolf? Is it Sontag?” When Madeleine responds that her real father is her father, her boyfriend responds: “Then you have to kill him.” When she in turn asks him who his father is, he says: “Godard.” One can’t help but wonder, though, …
  55. Individual access no substitute for community in scrum of ideasThe Australian
    The generation of the Apostles who later formed the core of the Bloomsbury group – Maynard Keynes, Lytton Strachey, Leonard Woolf (who married Virginia) – kept coming to the Orchard long after they had left Cambridge. Rupert Brooke, heart-throb of the …

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Anyone who attended Woolf and the City had the opportunity to meet Ruth Gruber, the amazing journalist and photographer who met Virginia and Leonard Woolf back in the 1930s. Gruber was also ahead of her time when she wrote Virginia Woolf: The Will to Create as a Woman. Scroll down to #22 to read about her milestone 100th birthday.

Ruth Gruber at Woolf and the City in 2009 wearing the commemorative conference t-shirt

  1. After the side suits, think about trumps, Post-Tribune
    Virginia Woolf
    , an English writer who is regarded as a leading modernist literary figure of the last century, said, “On the outskirts of every agony sits some observant fellow who points.” At the center of many bridge agonies sits an unobservant player
  2. Secretly Seeking Solitude: A Woman’s Need for Time Alone, Huffington Post (blog)
    As Dr. Phil says, “Ya gotta name it to claim it,” and Virginia Woolf most certainly did. Her speeches that turned into the seminal and necessary essay A Room of One’s Own codified a woman’s need for time to herself. She brought the idea to the surface
  3. Thou shall not kill … except in this case, easttennessean.com (subscription)
    Virginia Woolf has a way with words. Over 70 years after her death, there remains an intense relevance in her work. One of Woolf’s best essays, entitled “Professions for Women,” references the heroine of a rather sexist narrative poem, The Angel in the
  4. The Truth Behind Tim Hudak’s Homophobic Flyers, DigitalJournal.com (press release)
    The page cited in the PC flyer is a list of “Significant International” gay and lesbian individuals, including Ellen Degeneres, Rosie O’Donnell, Virginia Woolf and Harvey Milk. PC Claim: “Reclaim Valentine’s Day and celebrate sexual diversity [with a]
  5. Something brewing beneath transphobic ads in Ontario, rabble.ca (blog)
    As for cross-dressing, the… page cited in the PC flyer is a list of ‘Significant International’ gay and lesbian individuals, including Ellen Degeneres, Rosie O’Donnell, Virginia Woolf and Harvey Milk.” The flyer (like McVety’s ad) is a litany of
  6. The Genius of Free Governments, Huffington Post (blog)
    distributors that listed early films of Fellini and Hitchcock have had to delete them from their catalogs; bookstores that offered cheap editions of Joseph Conrad, George Orwell, HG Wells, and Virginia Woolf have pulled them from the shelves.
  7. The Sharpest Beach Bums You’ll Ever Meet, Brooklyn Rail
    It’s not that Wark’s lack of a compelling narrative structure makes slogging through the book an occasionally arduous experience; writers like Virginia Woolf can dispense of narrative completely and still craft engrossing literature.
  8. PadGadget Weekly App Series – Apps for Outdoors Experience, PadGadget
    This app includes such tales as “A Haunted House” by Virginia Woolf, “The Door in the Wall” by HG Wells and “The Pit and the Pendulum” by Edgar Allen Poe. This app really offers a great collection of short stories that will keep everyone entertained on
  9. Johanna Skibsrud: The writer, the prize, the year after, Globe and Mail
    Skibsrud names Virginia Woolf’s most challenging novel, The Waves, as a major source of inspiration for her own work, which likewise demands concentration from readers. “A lot of times people don’t want to pay that attention,” she said. “I don’t know.
  10. The Future of Feminism by Sylvia Walby, Bookslut
    The Future of Feminism will not win any prose awards, and it does seem time for a reminder that Virginia Woolf penned analytic and polemic texts that were all the stronger for their style. Nonetheless, Walby avoids the opacity of most academic prose,
  11. The hipster rules, OK?, Times LIVE
    They claim to like writers with loaded names such as Virginia Woolf, Voltaire and Chomsky. They drink beer, are coffee connoisseurs, smoke Lucky Strike or Camel, don’t use deodorant, listen to bands that nobody has ever heard of.
  12. Literature and food join forces at İstanbul’s 3rd Tanpınar fest, Today’s Zaman
    British author and self-confessed childhood bookworm Mark Crick’s witty work “Kafka’s Soup, A History of World Literature,” delivers 14 recipes in the writing styles of famous writers from Virginia Woolf to Jane Austen. Germany’s Jasmin Ramadan also
  13. Kidman, Watts to record bedtime stories, Sydney Morning Herald
    Kidman will read Virginia Woolf’s To the Lighthouse while Watts will read Summer by Edith Wharton. Kidman won an Oscar for her portrayal of Woolf in The Hours. Hollywood stars Samuel L Jackson, Kate Winslet, Anne Hathaway, Colin Firth, Meg Ryan,
  14. Kate Winslet And Other Stars Lend Their Voices to Audible Books, Shockya.com
    The company has enlisted the help of some well-known voices to record such novels as The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by L. Frank Baum, Being There from novelist Jerzey Kosinski, and To The Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf. Per The Hollywood Reporter,
  15. Audiobooks with star appeal, xmediaonline – Exeposé
    Virginia Woolf’s famous Twentieth Century novels are amongst those being recorded. Kidman, who portrayed Woolf in the Oscar winning film The Hours, will be reading the 1927 novel To the Lighthouse while Annette Bening is recording Mrs Dalloway which
  16. Celebrities lend voices to bedtime stories, Silentnight Beds
    Nicole Kidman will be responsible for reading Virginia Woolf’s To the Lighthouse, as Naomi Watts records Summer by Edith Wharton. It recently emerged that the Jurys Inn chain of hotels was launching an e-book reader loan service for the convenience of
  17. Hollywood stars give voice to their favourite novels in audiobook boom, The Guardian
    STARRING ROLES Some of the Hollywood actors confirmed to take part in the series: Annette Bening Mrs Dalloway by Virginia Woolf Jennifer Connelly The Sheltering Sky by Paul Bowles Colin Firth The End of the Affair by Graham Greene Samuel L Jackson A
  18. Guest opinion, Aspen Times
    We examined a variety of social issues raised by the voices of Virginia Woolf, Rachel Carson and Martin Luther King. We honestly conversed about our own journeys as we opened up the writings of contemporary authors Ian McEwan, Joyce Carol Oates and
  19. In Supreme Court Argument, a Rock Legend Plays a Role, New York Times
    The affected works included films by Alfred Hitchcock and Federico Fellini, books by CS Lewis and Virginia Woolf, symphonies by Prokofiev and Stravinsky and paintings by Picasso. Jimi Hendrix joins a growing list of artists cited by the court. ..
  20. US defends copyright law for famous foreign works, Jerusalem Post
    adopted by Congress to comply with an international treaty, that restored copyright protection to foreign works, including films by Alfred Hitchcock, paintings by Picasso, symphonies by Stravinsky and books by CS Lewis and Virginia Woolf.
  21. The symphony and the novel – a harmonious couple?, The Guardian
    Certainly, western literature had its own sustained modernist moment, but while Virginia Woolf, James Joyce and others may have responded with fidelity to the death of the old gods by fashioning a prose fiction that dealt with the phenomenon of
  22. The Human Spirit: Ruth Gruber turns 100, Jerusalem Post
    Her thesis was about the feminism of a then little-known British writer: Virginia Woolf. In Germany, she loved das Land der Dichter und Denker, the land of poets and thinkers, but abhorred the dark side. An inborn reporter, she attended a Hitler rally
  23. Manifestations of modernity the new era and transitional societies, NL-Aid
    Seminal Bloomsbury-member Virginia Woolf expressed the hope at the beginning of the Twentieth century that ‘[a] political and social movement that give hope (……)’ would emerge. Indeed said epistemic community materialized, fostering and nurturing
  24. Send Men The Bill — They Made The Mess, Hartford Courant
    Virginia Woolf once wrote, “As a woman, I have no country … as a woman, my country is the whole world.” Unlike Woolf, I do have a country. One of which I am very proud. One that I now feel represents me and treats me like a citizen, something I think
  25. How to stay married, Macleans.ca
    In 1929, Virginia Woolf famously wrote of the need for women to have “money and a room of one’s own” to create art. In 1954, Anne Morrow Lindbergh, wife of Charles Lindbergh, wrote Gift From the Sea on a summer retreat from her husband and children,
  26. Op-ed: Chapter 11: Borders may be bankrupt, but your bookshelf need not suffer , The Maine Campus
    At least now overworked college students and middle-aged divorcees dying to read Virginia Woolf will be forced to visit their local used bookstores. Used bookstores are romantic, fun and most of all, cheap. Really, Borders closing their doors is just a
  27. Virginia Woolf, Financial Times
    In part because of its brevity, Alexandra Harris’s study of Virginia Woolf brings home how late in life she wrote her well-known works. In rapidly scanning the years, Harris emphasises how many were lost to self-doubt and illness, but also how only
  28. Tip Sheet for the Week of October 10, 2011: For Pleasure, Publishers Weekly
    In 1928, Virginia Woolf announced her intentions in her journal to take a “writer’s holiday,” a break from the heavy business of midwifing modernism to write something swift and light and pleasurable. Of course, “swift, light,
  29. Film: To the Lighthouse, Varsity Online
    by India Ross Despite the hewing of the film industry with this blunt axe of a contention, in the case of her modernist masterpiece, To the Lighthouse, and its lame 1983 made-for-TV adaptation, Virginia Woolf was right on the money.
  30. Go Go Gogi, Tehelka
    If you set up a parody of Virginia Woolf’s reportedly fraught relationship with her cook, this scene would be it. Gogi has no interest in cooking. She wasn’t brought up to think that she had to fake a love for domesticity in the way Woolf was.
  31. Into the Silence: The Great War, Mallory and the Conquest of Everest by Wade , The Guardian
    Sir Leslie Stephen, for example, the impeccably intellectual editor of the Dictionary of National Biography and father of Virginia Woolf, was an early president of the Alpine Club and wrote Peaks, Passes and Glaciers alongside The Science of Ethics.
  32. Alison Bechdel, A.V. Club Chicago
    There’s also some Virginia Woolf and some other literary stuff, but mostly the quotations in this book are about psychoanalysis. AVC: Your childhood journals played a huge role in Fun Home. Are they also a big part of Are You My Mother?
  33. Review by Rudy Oldeschulte, Metapsychology
    Virginia Woolf Examining oneself through other individual’s life stories, that is, through biography or memoir, or through conversations that one is engaged in during the day or evening – and re-examining those glimpses of our experience in our quiet
  34. Court Theatre Presents Denis O’Hare and Lisa Peterson’s An Iliad 11/10-12/11, Broadway World
    Lisa Peterson (Co-Playwright) directed The Model Apartment by Donald Margulies, Slavs! by Tony Kushner, Traps and Light Shining in Buckinghamshire by Caryl Churchill (Obie Award for Direction), The Waves adapted from Virginia Woolf (two Drama Desk ..
  35. Police and Poetry, The Atlantic
    “So life is simply from minute to minute of horror,” he wrote to Virginia Woolf. For the most part, he gave up trying to write poetry. “It is no use squeezing a dry sponge and it is no use trying to work a tired and distracted mind,” he wrote Gilbert
  36. BP Learned Mission, Antiques and the Arts Online
    general fiction (some signed), biography (some signed), works in Hebrew, fiction by Twain, Steinbeck, Virginia Woolf, HG Wells, Sherwood Anderson, and others, travel and adventure, poetry (some signed), limited editions, and children’s literature.
  37. Everywhere Man, The Atlantic
    is said by the editor and translator of the volume, Laird M. Easton, to be one of the greatest ever written, “comparable in its stature to those of Samuel Pepys, André Gide, Henri Frédéric Amiel, Beatrice Webb, or Virginia Woolf.
  38. ANONYMOUS Character Card #2- Vanessa Redgrave/ Joley Richardson as Queen Elizabeth, Broadway World
    Marleen Gorris’ Mrs. Dalloway (adapted from the Virginia Woolf novel by Eileen Atkins); her son Carlo Nero’s “The Fever” for HBO Films; Roger Michell’s Venus; Lajos Koltai’s Evening; and, in 2008, Atonement, an Oscar® nominee for Best Picture.
  39. Let There Be Light: The TFT Review of The Luminist by David Rocklin, The Faster Times (blog)
    One these innovators, Julia Margaret Cameron, spent her life developing techniques for taking soft-focus portraits, and her surviving prints include an image of her niece, Julia Prinsep Jackson, mother of Virginia Woolf. But that isn’t Julia Margaret
  40. Review: Evanesence runs gloom into the ground on new album, Reuters
    Maybe Lee is suffering through one of the most tumultuous marriages this side of “Virginia Woolf,” or perhaps she’s still drawing emotional fuel from her feud with the disgruntled former band members who reassembled as We Are the Fallen.
  41. Read the reviews: “Always, Patsy Cline,” “Sugar,” “The Laramie Project” and , Naples Daily News (blog)
    And we do it all again in sixteen days – “Later Life,” “Virginia Woolf,” “Handle With Care” and “Rumors.” There’s been a lot of debate over the reviews. That’s good. You (actors, directors, the general public) are always free to contact me.
  42. And Now Some New Music From the Ladies: Feist, Bjork and More, Autostraddle
    The first single release “What the Water Gave Me” references a Frida Kahlo painting, Virginia Woolf and Greek mythology and with that adorable goofy dancing in the video, WHAT MORE DO YOU NEED TO KNOW! Second single “Shake It Out” is stunning,
  43. Readers’ tips: literary locations, Travel Agent
    Bedbury Lane, Freshwater Bay, 01983 752500, farringford.co.uk Esmeballard Godrevy Lighthouse, St Ives Though Virginia Woolf set her 1927 novel To the Lighthouse in the Hebrides, it was inspired by childhood holidays at St Ives in Cornwall – pure white
  44. The Old Wives’ Tale (Modern Library #87), Reluctant Habits
    In 1923, Virginia Woolf got nasty with an essay entitled “Mr. Bennett and Mrs. Brown”: “he is trying to hypnotize us into the belief that, because he has made a house, there must be a person living there.” And many seemed to believe her.
  45. About That “Last Chance” Written in the Sky Last Night, Bowery Boogie (blog)
    “When, in Virginia Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway, a crowd gathers to piece together skywriting, the spectacle unites disparate groups, as they cluster together to find meaning in the urban landscape. I am looking for folks to become a part of it by taking
  46. Women’s emancipation started with 1911, China Daily
    By Li Yinhe (China Daily) In A Room of One’s Own, Virginia Woolf, known for her biting criticism of gender discrimination, describes how a woman like her was denied entry into a university library without the supervision of a man.
  47. Depp To Produce Biopic Of Dr. Seuss, Lez Get Real
    Very few writers lead lives interesting enough to warrant a biographical feature film, unless they suffer from bouts of depression and kill themselves like Sylvia Plath and Virginia Woolf, or harbor unnatural thoughts about small children like Charles
  48. The great disconnect of social media, The Coloradoan
    I packed up some things I didn’t really need like a curling iron and some Virginia Woolf books and I left some things I really did need like my friends and family. Instead of calling every day or week, I contented myself with learning about their lives
  49. Claire Black: ‘Virginia Woolf and Zadie Smith got it right when they said the , Scotsman
    Virginia Woolf (and Zadie Smith for that matter), got it right when they said the novel is for “grown-ups”. It really is. Back in 1992, I wouldn’t have understood Dorothea Brooke’s transformation through experience because, frankly, I didn’t have very
  50. Green; it’s not breezy, Bay View Compass
    Takal’s Genevieve is very much like a heroine of a Virginia Woolf story. She’s fragile, neurotic, and her fine intelligence fails to protect her from her perverse imagination. In an interview with Amarelle Wenkert, Takal said she wrote Green “literally
  51. The Stranger’s Child by Allan Hollinghurst, Toronto Star
    The novel is rich in allusions to works as diverse as Brideshead Revisited, EM Forster’s The Longest Road, and To the Lighthouse (Cecil is loosely based on Bloomsbury Group member and friend of Virginia Woolf’s Rupert Brooke), as well as more
  52. Why IKEA’s ‘Manland’ is Swedish for emasculated baby-men, Globe and Mail
    In the essay A Room of One’s Own, Virginia Woolf wrote of the necessity of privacy and money for a truly fulfilling creative life – each tough to come by for women of her time. She described walking past a library at Oxford in contemplation: “I thought

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