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The Voyage Out
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Katy, Quarterly Long Reads
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Mar 07, 2021 06:42PM

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I want a suggestion from you all , if you have any... which biography should I read for Virginia Woolf? I wanted to read one but there are so many that I get confused and I suppose this is the best place to discuss this question.



I read Mrs. Dalloway late last year. And want to read as part of a personal study also
The London Scene: Six Essays on London Life also by Virginia Woolf
Flâneuse: Women Walk the City in Paris, New York, Tokyo, Venice and London by Lauren Elkin who writes about walking around cities like both Virginia Woolf did in real life and Mrs Dalloway does in the novella.




Yes, you are right about the relaxation part, I too feel that her prose is soft, free flow almost event less.

I'll probably start Voyage Out in a week or so ...


*attended women's colleges or women's coordinate institutions (like Radcliffe at Harvard)
*studied more feminine topics like teaching or home economics
Often these were the well-heeled and well-educated women.
Rachel was slap-dash educated at home, not formally, not systematically. And she has no sexual experience even of the kissing and rough-embraces sort. Mrs Ambrose determines to give Rachel opportunity to become educated in the ways of men and women. Mrs Ambrose provides little direction, just exerience--at least so far. Really she should have explained a few things.

Looking forward to reading Voyage Out soon ...


Yes, I would guess that this in kind applies to all conservative regions in the western world, and just a little less to the more progressive ...
Reading female literature from past centuries or viewing film documentation from the 50s, I always feel thankful of how much we have achieved so far - yet at the same time sad at how little we have achieved in such a long time ...


I too thought this was a coming of age story. And I agree with you on the relaxation part, Cynda. I found her writing here so soothing. I read somewhere that the relationship between Helen and Rachel was somewhat modeled on Virginia and her sister Vanessa. I couldn't find any verification on the point, so not sure of its truth.

Thanks for sharing this article, Cynda. I always thought Virginia's writing has rhythm. Now I see I haven't been imagining. :)


In a recent chapter, a preacher exhorts his congregation in a way that reminds me of White Man's Burden--to tend to those who serve us.
In Chapter 21, the similarities between groups is shown. When Rachel finds herself in the camp or settlement of riverside SouthAmericans (maybe Amazonians), she sits among the community in a triangular-shaped grouping. When Rachel returns to the English community, the group sits in a triangular-shape grouping. Woolf seems to be indicating that their may be some unnoticed similarities between social groups, that those who live in riverside camps may not be as different as originally imaged?
Books mentioned in this topic
Mrs. Dalloway (other topics)The London Scene: Six Essays on London Life (other topics)
Flâneuse: Women Walk the City in Paris, New York, Tokyo, Venice and London (other topics)
The Voyage Out (other topics)
Authors mentioned in this topic
Lauren Elkin (other topics)Virginia Woolf (other topics)