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The Voyage Out (Audiobook)
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The Voyage Out (Audiobook) by Virginia Woolf and Wanda McCaddonThe Voyage Out (Audiobook) by Virginia Woolf and Wanda McCaddon

by Virginia Woolf and Wanda McCaddon

In The Voyage Out, one of Virginia Woolf's wittiest, socially satirical novels, Rachel Vinrace embarks for South America on her father's ship and is launched on a course of self-discovery in a modern version of the mythic voyage.

 
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Tags: Woolf, Wanda, McCaddon, Virginia, Audiobook, Voyage
Virginia Woolf - Orlando
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Virginia Woolf - Orlando

Virginia Woolf - Orlando

[Unabridged audiobook with text]

 

Orlando: A Biography is an influential novel by Virginia Woolf, first published on 11 October 1928. A semi-biographical novel based in part on the life of Woolf's intimate friend Vita Sackville-West, it is generally considered one of Woolf's most accessible novels. The novel has been influential stylistically, and is considered important in literature generally, and particularly in the history of women's writing and gender studies.

REUPLOAD NEEDED

 

 
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Tags: novel, Woolf, influential, Woolfs, Virginia, Orlando
The Common Reader - First Series
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The Common Reader - First Series

Collection of essays by Virginia Woolf, published in two series, the first in 1925 and the second in 1932. The title indicates Woolf's intention that her essays be read by the educated but non-scholarly "common reader," who examines books for personal enjoyment. Woolf outlines her literary philosophy in the introductory essay to the first series, "The Common Reader," and in the concluding essay to the second series, "How Should One Read a Book?"
 
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Tags: Woolf, series, Reader, Common, second
Orlando
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Orlando

In 1928, way before everyone else was talking about gender-bending and way, Virginia Woolf wrote her comic masterpiece, a fantastic, fanciful love letter disguised as a biography, to Vita Sackville-West. Orlando enters the book as an Elizabethan nobleman and leaves the book three centuries and one change of gender later as a liberated woman of the 1920s. Along the way this most rambunctious of Woolf's characters engages in sword fights, trades barbs with 18th century wits, has a baby, and drives a car. This is a deliriously written, breathless-making book and a classic both of lesbian literature and the Western canon.
 
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Tags: Orlando, Woolf, characters, engages, sword
Three Guineas
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Three Guineas

The highly controversial "Three Guineas" was Virginia Woolf's most explicit statement of her feminism. Forming part of the "Shakespeare Head Press" series of Woolf's works, this new edition includes her carefully considered selection of photographs, her discursive endnotes and extensive new annotations of her references and allusions.
 
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Tags: Woolf, Three, Guineas, photographs, selection