A Writer's Diary: Being Extracts from the Diary of Virginia Woolf

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Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2003 - Biography & Autobiography - 355 pages
An invaluable guide to the art and mind of Virginia Woolf, drawn from the personal record she kept over a period of twenty-seven years.

Included are entries that refer to her own writing, and those that are relevant to the raw material of her work, and, finally, comments on the books she was reading. The first entry included here is dated 1918 and the last, three weeks before her death in 1941. Between these points of time unfolds the private world--the anguish, the triumph, the creative vision--of one of the great writers of the twentieth century.

"A Writer's Diary . . . is Virginia Woolf . . . The whole vibrates with the ups and downs of a passionate relationship . . . in the intensities, variations, alarms and excursions, panics and exaltations of her relationship to her art."--New York Times Book Review

Edited and with a Preface by Leonard Woolf.
 

Selected pages

Contents

1918
1
1919
7
1920
22
1921
29
1922
41
1923
54
1924
61
1925
70
1932
173
1933
186
1934
208
1935
228
1936
254
1937
265
1938
278
1939
299

1926
84
1927
102
1928
120
1929
138
1930
149
1931
161

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About the author (2003)

VIRGINIA WOOLF (1882-1941) was one of the major literary figures of the twentieth century. An admired literary critic, she authored many essays, letters, journals, and short stories in addition to her groundbreaking novels, including Mrs. Dalloway, To The Lighthouse, and Orlando.

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