Lee, Hermione. Virginia Woolf. Chatto and Windus.
269
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
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Textual Features | Virginia Woolf | Hermione Lee
calls this VW
's novel of friendships, her Bloomsbury novel, Lee, Hermione. Virginia Woolf. Chatto and Windus. 269 |
Textual Features | Willa Cather | This summary may suggest to modern ears a cut-and-dried tale of goodies and baddies, but the motivations of all the central characters are mixed, and a large cast of subsidiary characters enacts complexity where a... |
Textual Features | Virginia Woolf | Freshwater was the name of Julia Margaret Cameron
's estate on the Isle of Wight, where Anne Thackeray Ritchie
had a cottage. The Stephen children had stayed there. Lee, Hermione. Virginia Woolf. Chatto and Windus. 75-6 |
Textual Production | Virginia Woolf | Hermione Lee
points out that in this year—a typical one, though broken by illness—Woolf's productivity included making final pre-publication revisions to a novel and an essay collection, beginning work on another novel, writing eight... |
Textual Production | Virginia Woolf | Later reprints often appeared as The Common Reader, First Series. VW
took her title from a formulation of Samuel Johnson
's, meaning that non-specialist, non-academic reader to whose taste, said Johnson, he was always... |
Textual Production | Julia Strachey | JS
wrote the novel while staying with her aunt Dorothy Bussy
's family at Roquebrune in France, informally separated from her first husband, Stephen Tomlin
. Strachey, Julia, and Frances Partridge. Julia: A Portrait of Julia Strachey. Little, Brown. 113, 116 |
Textual Production | Willa Cather | WC
was a tireless letter-writer, and also kept a diary. She did not want her letters to be published, allegedly because she thought them too spontaneous and unpolished. Byatt, A. S., and Willa Cather. “Introduction”. A Lost Lady, Virago, p. v - xiv. vii |
Textual Production | Penelope Fitzgerald | Her biographer Hermione Lee
has said: she was writing away like mad in her teens and early twenties. Then this powerful stream disappeared underground, until up it comes, this underground river, at the age of... |
Violence | Virginia Woolf | VW
did not discuss this incident specifically until the last years of her life. Hermione Lee
, who considers the matter as fully as possible, argues that it would be rash to ignore or belittle... |
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