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Literary FictionModernist FictionClassics

Virginia Woolf

British · b. 1882

5 books reviewed Avg rating 4.2 / 5Top rating 4.6 / 5

Founding figure of modernist literature; considered one of the greatest writers of the 20th century

Virginia Woolf was a British modernist novelist and essayist whose To the Lighthouse and Mrs Dalloway remain two of the most formally innovative works in twentieth-century English literature.

Virginia Woolf is among the handful of novelists who genuinely changed the way fiction could represent consciousness. Mrs Dalloway, published in 1925, takes place over the course of a single day in postwar London and follows two characters — Clarissa Dalloway, an upper-class woman preparing a party, and Septimus Warren Smith, a shell-shocked veteran — whose inner worlds are rendered through a stream of consciousness technique that moves fluidly between perception, memory, and reflection. Time bends, surfaces crack, and the ordinary reveals depths that traditional narrative technique couldn’t access.

To the Lighthouse, published in 1927, is Woolf’s elegy for her parents and for a way of life destroyed by the First World War. It is structured in three parts, the middle of which — “Time Passes” — accounts for ten years, including the death of the novel’s central character, in a few pages of extraordinary lyrical compression. The novel’s concern is with impermanence, memory, and what endures of love and perception after the people who felt them are gone. It is as technically daring as anything in English fiction and as emotionally immediate.

Woolf is not an easy writer — her novels resist summary and reward slow reading — but the difficulty is purposeful and the rewards proportionate. She is also, in her essays, one of the finest prose stylists of the twentieth century, and A Room of One’s Own remains essential reading on women, writing, and freedom.

5 Books Reviewed

To the Lighthouse book cover
Editor's Pick

To the Lighthouse

by Virginia Woolf

4.6

The Ramsay family's two visits to their summer house in the Hebrides, separated by ten years and the First World War — and Lily Briscoe's attempt to paint what cannot be painted.

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Mrs Dalloway book cover
Editor's Pick

Mrs Dalloway

by Virginia Woolf

4.5

A single day in the life of Clarissa Dalloway, preparing a party in postwar London — intercut with the experiences of Septimus Warren Smith, a shell-shocked veteran she will never meet.

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A Room of One's Own book cover

A Room of One's Own

by Virginia Woolf

4.1

Woolf's extended essay argues that a woman must have money and a room of her own to write fiction. Through invention, irony, and a fictional woman narrator, she examines why women have historically been excluded from literary culture — and what would change if they weren't.

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The Waves book cover

The Waves

by Virginia Woolf

4.0

Six friends speak their inner lives across childhood, youth, and middle age — not in dialogue but in pure soliloquy, interspersed with wave descriptions. Woolf's most radical novel dissolves the boundaries between prose and poetry, self and world.

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Orlando book cover

Orlando

by Virginia Woolf

3.9

Orlando lives for centuries, transforming from an Elizabethan nobleman into a woman in the eighteenth century, and waking finally in 1928. Woolf's joyful fantasy — a love letter to Vita Sackville-West — is her most accessible novel and an enduring meditation on gender, identity, and literary tradition.

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