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Leonard Woolf and
Virginia Stephen in July 1912, the month before their
wedding, by kind permission of Henrietta Garnett |
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312p PERSEPHONE BOOKS ISBN 1903155339
PREFACE BY LYNDALL GORDON
The Wise Virgins (1913) is a semi-autobiographical
novel about a dilemma: whether Harry, the hero, should
go into the family business and marry the suitable but
dull girl next door or move in artistic circles and marry
one of the entrancing 'Lawrence' girls. For, as Lyndall
Gordon writes: 'It is a truth widely acknowledged that
Camilla Lawrence is a portrait of the author's wife - Virginia
Woolf.' This is one reason why the novel is so intriguing.
But it is also a Forsterian social comedy, funny, perceptive,
highly intelligent, full of clever dialogue and at times
bitterly satirical; while the dramatic and emotional dénouement still
retains a great deal of its power to shock.
It was on his honeymoon in 1912 that Leonard Woolf began
writing his second (and final) novel. He was 31, newly
returned from seven years as a colonial administrator,
and asking himself much the same questions as his hero.
Helen Dunmore wrote in The Sunday Times: 'It's a
passionate, cuttingly truthful story of a love affair between
two people struggling against the prejudices of their time
and place. Woolf's writing is almost unbearably honest.'
The endpaper we chose is 'White',
an Omega Workshop linen designed by Vanessa Bell, Virginia
Woolf's sister, in 1913.
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