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On Being Ill

Best in textbook rentals since 2012!

ISBN-10: 1930464134

ISBN-13: 9781930464131

Edition: 2012

Authors: Virginia Woolf, Hermione Lee, Rita Charon, Mark Hussey, Julia Stephen

List price: $16.00
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Description:

"By turns lyrical, self-mocking, and outlandish, Woolf's meditation on the perils and privileges of the sickbed lampoons the loneliness that makes one 'glad of a kick from a housemaid.' When Woolf imagines beauty in a frozen-over garden . . . it seems less a triumph of nature than of art."—The New Yorker"Brilliant and beautiful."—Francine Prose,Bookforum"[A] long-neglected reverie on illness . . . reprinted by the sterling Paris Press. This is a brilliant and odd book, charged with restrained emotion and sudden humor."—Los Angeles Times Book Review"The resurrection of this forgotten work on illness is a boon indeed. . . . This is Woolf at her spangled best."—BooklistIn this poignant and…    
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Book details

List price: $16.00
Copyright year: 2012
Publisher: Wesleyan University Press
Publication date: 11/6/2012
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 160
Size: 5.00" wide x 8.00" long x 0.50" tall
Weight: 0.396
Language: English

Virginia Woolf was born in London, the daughter of the prominent literary critic Leslie Stephen. She never received a formal university education; her early education was obtained at home through her parents and governesses. After death of her father in 1904, her family moved to Bloomsbury, where they formed the nucleus of the Bloomsbury Group, a circle of philosophers, writers and artists. As a writer, Woolf was a great experimenter. She scorned the traditional narrative form and turned to expressionism as a means of telling her story. Mrs. Dalloway (1925) and To The Lighthouse (1927), her two generally acknowledged masterpieces, are stream-of-consciousness novels in which most of the…