Preview added to your library
Orlando A Biography / With A Foreword By Philip Dossick By: Philip Dossick, Foreword,Virginia Woolf

Orlando A Biography / With A Foreword By Philip Dossick

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Rate this book!

( 0 customer ratings)

In order to rate this item, you must sign in first.

Editions Artisan Devereaux LLC, July 2012

Synopsis

 

 

FROM THE FOREWORD BY PHILIP DOSSICK

 

In a 1929 letter to G. Lowes Dickinson, Virginia Woolf explained why she penned A Room of One’s Own:  "I wanted to encourage the young women. They seem to get fearfully depressed."

Sublime! She enthralls the senses while crystallizing the boundaries of gender. 

A Room of One's Own, by Virginia Woolf, has long been recognized as a landmark feminist essay.  It was based upon two college lectures Woolf gave in 1928, after she had been asked to speak on the topic of Women and Fiction.

She argued that because so many women lacked freedom and education, they were hopelessly inhibited in their lives, deprived of the necessary settings for their innate genius to flow. In short, they had been abused and dominated by men for centuries.

“Why did men drink wine and women drink water?” she asked. “Why was one sex so prosperous, and the other so poor?”

She posited that the truest emancipation of women would only occur when they became appropriately independent, freed from financial, and cultural restrictions—to transcend the narrow sexual roles society had cast them in." Coleridge perhaps meant this,” she noted, “when he said that a great mind is androgynous. It is when this fusion takes place that the mind is fully fertilised and uses all of its faculties."

“Lock up your libraries if you like;” she writes, “but there is no gate, no lock, no bolt, that you can set upon the freedom of my mind.”

A Room of One's Own is, in sum, a brilliantly perceptive and pioneering essay on women and fiction, written by one of the twentieth century's most challenging thinkers, a woman who justly succeeded in creating a room of her own—in the pantheon of modern English literature.

 

When an author crosses a personal boundary and begins a novel, he or she must decide what to do with a maelstrom of themes written or spoken of thousands of times over hundreds of years.

Do you simply incorporate and accommodate them to your work with less and less emotional force for the reader? Or, do you distill your ideas, like VSOP, getting rid of the superfluous, so only the highest-proof remains?

How does one avoid smug clichés, while exploring the dark shadows of the psyche?

The thrill of reading Virginia Woolf’s Orlando is the feeling of looking into a whirlpool just as something utterly extraordinary materializes for the first time: an exhilarating hallucination of surreal and beautiful images that remain in memory long after you put the book down.

The language itself dazzles: vivid, evocative, poetic language, that challenges the best of James Joyce, with Woolf's gift for inner dialogue—the lies her characters relentlessly tell themselves—which in turn reveal them to us.

Nobody does inner monologues like Virginia Woolf. Her form intersperses lengthy labyrinthine stream-of-consciousness, with brilliantly placed atonal fanfares.

Orlando has it all: life, death, immortality, homoerotic desire, lesbianism, and the evanescence of time. Love, fear, solitude, death, and time-travel—the subjects float by like parasols in the rain.

Her characters are striking. We live in that troubled universe with them. In the tragic futility, the absurdity, the divine pathos, the delicate beauty of contemplation, all of life happens. Instinctively, she understands that the beauty of the human landscape resides in its melancholy.

Orlando can be found on countless lists of the finest novels of the 20th century, and is one of Virginia Woolf's major achievements. It is considered one of her greatest works after Mrs. Dalloway and To The Lighthouse.

Stick with it and you’ll find this landmark novel a captivating reward well worth the effort.

PHILIP DOSSICK

 

VIRGINIA WOOLF (1882-1941), one of the greatest authors of the twentieth century, transformed the art of fiction. The author of numerous novels and short stories, she was also an acknowledged master of the essay form, and an admired literary critic.

PHILIP DOSSICK is the New York Times critically acclaimed writer and director of the motion picture The P.O.W. He has written for television, including the outstanding drama, Transplant, produced by David Susskind for CBS. His most recent books include Aztecs: Epoch Of Social Revolution, Sex And Dreams, Mark Twain In Seattle, The Naked Citizen: Notes On Privacy In The Twenty-First Century, Raymond Chowder And Bob Skloot Must Die, and The Deposition.

 

Preview added to your library

Orlando A Biography / With A Foreword By Philip Dossick

Editions Artisan Devereaux LLC, July 2012
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
( 0 customer ratings)

You Might Like:

eBook Information

ISBN: 1230000006806
Language:  English
Download options: Adobe DRM EPUB

Files Available for Download

If you use one of Kobo's free reading apps you won't need to worry about download options most of the time. Your Kobo reading app can easily add Kobo Store books to your library for a seamless reading experience.

Download options matter when:

  • You want to read your book on an eReader other than the Kobo eReader (see here for a list of supported eReaders).
  • The book you want is only available as an Adobe DRM PDF.

In both of these cases you will need to:

  1. Download a copy of your book to your computer.
  2. Open the book using a free application called Adobe Digital Editions.

You can also use Digital Editions to transfer the book to your eReader. See here for more information on Digital Editions.

Read this on:

  • Desktop More

    Kobo Desktop App

    You can read this item on your computer using our free Kobo Desktop Application. This application lets you read, manage your library of eBooks, and even shop for new ones. Check out our demo for more information!

    Download it now for PC!

    Download App!

    Mac user? Click here

    Download it now for Mac!

    Download App!

    PC user? Click here

    Learn More »
  • eReaders More

    eReading Devices

    You can read this item on your Kobo eReader (or other select electronic reading devices). The Kobo eReader lets you carry your whole library with you, so that you can read on the go.

    Visit kobo.com/ereaders »
  • Tablets More

    Tablets

    You can read this item on select tablets using one of our free Kobo apps. These apps let you read, manage your library of eBooks, and even shop for new ones.

    Learn More »
  • Kobo Vox More

    Kobo Vox

    You can read this item on your Kobo Vox eReader. The Kobo Vox eReader lets you read books with color, sound or interactive elements. Check out our demo for more information on the Kobo Vox.

    Learn More »
  • Kobo Arc More

    Kobo Arc

    You can read this item on your Kobo Arc using the Library app. This app lets you read, manage your library of eBooks, and shop for new books.

    Learn More »
  • Android More

    Android

    You can read this item on any Android device (phone, tablet) with one of our free Kobo apps. These apps let you read, manage your library of eBooks, and even shop for new ones.

    Learn More »
  • iPhone More

    iPhone

    You can read this item on the free Kobo app for iPhone. This app let you read, manage your library of eBooks, and even shop for new ones.

    Download the iPhone App! Learn More »

Goodreads Reviews for Orlando A Biography / With A Foreword By Philip Dossick

{1}

By: {2}

Available on: {3}

Coming soon

Secure Transaction

Subtotal

Store Credit

Total

We'll charge your credit card {4} on {3}.

We'll charge your credit card {4} when the book is added to your Library.

Your store credit covers the cost of this purchase, so we don't charge your credit card

Use Quick Buy for all eBook purchases.
{0}
By clicking Buy Now, I agree to Kobo's Terms of Sale. BUY NOW Pre-Order

Thank you for your purchase

Thanks for pre-ordering

{2} is now in your library. You'll receive an email confirming your purchase very soon.

{2} has been pre-ordered. You'll receive a confirmation email confirming your pre-order very soon.

You were charged:

You will be charged: on {3}

You will be charged: when the book is added to your Library

Rakuten Super Points earned: {1}

Rakuten Super Points {1} earned after the book is added to your Library

{0}
Continue shopping