AUDIOBOOK

About
In the early years of its existence, the published some of the finest writers in English: T. S. Eliot, Henry James and E. M. Forster among them. But one of the paper's defining voices was Virginia Woolf, who produced a string of superb essays between the two World Wars. The weirdness of Elizabethan plays, the pleasure of revisiting favorite novels, the supreme examples of Charlotte Brontë, George Eliot and Henry James, Thomas Hardy and Joseph Conrad: all are here, in anonymously published pieces, in which may be glimpsed the thinking behind Woolf's works of fiction and the enquiring, feminist spirit of . Here is Woolf the critical essayist, offering, at one moment, a playful hypothesis and, at another, a judgement laid down with the authority of a twentieth-century Dr Johnson. Here is Woolf working out precisely what's great about Hardy, and how Elizabeth Barrett Browning made books a "substitute for living" because she was "forbidden to scamper on the grass". Above all, here is Virginia Woolf the reader, whose enthusiasm for great literature remains palpable and inspirational today.
Related Subjects
Artists
Similar Artists
Ali Smith
Anne Sexton
Anzia Yezierska
Armistead Maupin
Bradford Morrow
Charles Webb
Christopher Isherwood
Dani Shapiro
Djuna Barnes
Doris Lessing
Elaine Showalter
Ford Madox Ford
Gertrude Stein
Harry Blamires
Iris Murdoch
Italo Calvino
Jeanette Winterson
Johann Wolfgang Von Goethe
John Fowles
Julian Barnes
Kate Millett
Katherine Mansfield
Marcel Proust
Mary McCarthy
Mary Wollstonecraft
Milan Kundera
Muriel Spark
Penelope Fitzgerald
Samuel Beckett
Shamim Sarif
Susan Sontag
Sylvia Plath
Sylvia Townsend Warner
Thomas Mann