The author of such landmark works as "Mrs. Dalloway, To the
Lighthouse, " and "A Room of One's Own" and a woman and an artist
far ahead of the time in which she lived and worked, Virginia Woolf
has been the object of scrutiny ever since her suicide in 1941.
Here, using excerpts from family journals as well as pieces of
Virginia's own correspondance and diaries, Quentin Bell has created
an unparalleled portrait of his aunt and provides a view of
Bloomsbury life as only a family member could. Through a childhood
of arrivals and departures to the inspiration behind Woolf's
greatest books, her marriage to Leonard Woolf, and her daring
affair with Vita Sackville-West, Bell reveals the human being
behind what has become the Bloomsbury legend.
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