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The Years (Vintage Classics Woolf Series)
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WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY SUSAN
HILL
The
Years follows the lives of the Pargiters, a large middle-class
London family, from an uncertain spring in 1880 to a party on a
summer evening in the 1930s. We see them each endure and remember
heart-break, loss, radical change and stifling conformity, marriage
and regret. Written in 1937, this was the most popular of Virginia
Woolf's novels during her lifetime, and is a powerful indictment of
'Victorianism' and its
values.
Virginia
Woolf was born in London in 1882, the daughter of Sir Leslie
Stephen, first editor of The Dictionary of National Biography.
After his death in 1904 Virginia and her sister, the painter
Vanessa Bell, moved to Bloomsbury and became the centre of 'The
Bloomsbury Group'. This informal collective of artists and writers
which included Lytton Strachey and Roger Fry, exerted a powerful
influence over early twentieth-century British
culture.
In 1912 Virginia married
Leonard Woolf, a writer and social reformer. Three years later, her
first novel The Voyage Out was published, followed by Night and Day
(1919) and Jacob's Room (1922). These first novels show the
development of Virginia Woolf's distinctive and innovative
narrative style. It was during this time that she and Leonard Woolf
founded The Hogarth Press with the publication of the co-authored
Two Stories in 1917, hand-printed in the dining room of their house
in Surrey.
Between 1925 and 1931
Virginia Woolf produced what are now regarded as her finest
masterpieces, from Mrs Dalloway (1925) to the poetic and highly
experimental novel The Waves (1931). She also maintained an
astonishing output of literary criticism, short fiction, journalism
and biography, including the playfully subversive Orlando (1928)
and A Room of One's Own (1929) a passionate feminist essay. This
intense creative productivity was often matched by periods of
mental illness, from which she had suffered since her mother's
death in 1895. On 28 March 1941, a few months before the
publication of her final novel, Between the Acts, Virginia Woolf
committed suicide.