Vita Sackville-West
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Standard Name: Sackville-West, Vita
Birth Name: Victoria Mary Sackville-West
Nickname: Mar
Self-constructed Name: Vita Sackville-West
Self-constructed Name: V. Sackville-West
Married Name: Victoria Mary Nicolson
Self-constructed Name: Julian Sackville-West
Self-constructed Name: David Sackville-West
Styled: the Honourable Victoria Mary Sackville-West
The Land and The Garden, create classically-descended georgic from the traditional labour of the Kentish countryside, and the related art of gardening. Many novels (some she called pot-boilers) use conventional style to delineate upper-class society, but she also made forays (first inspired by
) into the experimental. She wrote history, biography, travel books, diaries, and letters. She was a popular and productive journalist, both in print and on the radio, whose topics included literature, gardening, and the status of women (though she refused the label of feminist). Her gardening writings and her actual gardens remain her best-known works. Her masterpiece, the Sissinghurst gardens, are the most-visited in Britain.
wrote prolifically and almost obsessively from her childhood in the early twentieth century. She began with poems, plays, and fiction about her family's romantic links to English history. As an adult she used these genres to describe or transform her own complicated love-life: lesbian relationships, triangular relationships, love between masculine women and feminine men. Her best-known poems, Timeline
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Texts
Sackville-West, Vita. The Easter Party. Michael Joseph, 1953.
Sackville-West, Vita. The Edwardians. Hogarth Press, 1930.
Sackville-West, Vita. The Garden. Michael Joseph, 1946.
Sackville-West, Vita. The Heir. Heinemann, 1922.
Sackville-West, Vita. The Land. Heinemann, 1926.
Sackville-West, Vita. The Land. Heinemann, 1948.
Sackville-West, Vita. The Letters of Vita Sackville-West to Virginia Woolf. Editors DeSalvo, Louise and Mitchell A. Leaska, Hutchinson, 1984.
Sackville-West, Vita. The Letters of Vita Sackville-West to Virginia Woolf. Editors DeSalvo, Louise and Mitchell A. Leaska, William Morrow, 1985.
Sackville-West, Vita. The Marie Curie Hospital. Tay Press, 1946.
Jullian, Philippe et al. The Other Woman. Houghton Mifflin, 1976.
Sackville-West, Vita. “The Women Poets of the Seventies”. The Eighteen-Seventies: Essays by Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, edited by Harley Granville-Barker, Cambridge University Press, 1929, pp. 111-32.
Sackville-West, Vita. The Women’s Land Army. Michael Joseph, 1944.
Sackville-West, Vita. Thirty Clocks Strike the Hour. Doubleday, Doran, 1932.
Sackville-West, Vita. Twelve Days. Hogarth Press.
Jullian, Philippe et al. Violet Trefusis: Life and Letters. Hamish Hamilton, 1976.
Sackville-West, Vita, and Harold Nicolson. Vita and Harold. Editor Nicolson, Nigel, Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1992.