Virginia woolf 1927

Virginia Wolf

  • The diary of Virginia Woolf

    The diary of Virginia Woolf
    It is a book about mortality, knowing that death is coming and making the most of what is now and here.
  • The mark on the wall

    The mark on the wall
    The Mark on the Wall is the first published story by Virginia Woolf.
  • Kew Gardens

    Kew Gardens
    The story describes four pairs of people-a married couple, an elderly man with a young man, two elderly women, and a young couple-as they pass a flower bed in a botanical garden in London.
  • The haunted house

    The haunted house
    Is a very short piece which oneirically depicts two couples sharing the same centenary house: the live one trying to sleep while listening to the eerie other who keeps wandering from room to room to seek “their hidden joy”
  • Mr. Bennett and Mrs. Brown

    Mr. Bennett and Mrs. Brown
    In this text, Woolf argues that literary conventions should change as society does and proposes that literary Modernism is a means to represent the changing condition of individuals and society in the early 20th century.
  • Mrs. Dalloway

    Mrs. Dalloway
    It examines one day in the life of Clarissa Dalloway, an upper-class Londoner married to a member of Parliament.
  • Al Faro

    Al Faro
    The novel centres on the Ramsay family and their visits to the Isle of Skye in Scotland in 1910.
  • A Room of One's Own

    A Room of One's Own
    Is based on two lectures given by the author in 1928 at two colleges for women at Cambridge
  • Orlando

    Orlando
    It follows the life of Orlando, born a man in Elizabethan England, who experiences a mysterious sex change at the age of 30 and stays alive for 300 years.
  • The Lady in the Looking Glass

    The Lady in the Looking Glass
    A short story by Virginia Woolf published in Harper's in December 1929, describes the images reflected in a mirror situated in a woman's dressing room, providing a glimpse of the furnishings of her life, but, pointedly, not allowing us a glimpse into the more private