From the Bookshelf of Around the Year in 52 Books …
Find A Copy At
Group Discussions About This Book
No group discussions for this book yet.
What Members Thought

I went into this with such high hopes. I did not leave with them. I was confused and irritated by most of what I read. Yes, the time passed can explain some of that but over all this book just wasn't for me. Whatever I was supposed to take from it I didn't get.
...more

Despite this long form essay having been written almost 100 years ago, it is tragically just as relevant today. Woolf's musings on why women never wrote good poetry, why there was no female Shakespeare and why literature written by women was so sparse still feels relevant. Yes, women have made enormous strides from when she was writing, but so many women are still at the mercy of the patriarchal forces which Woolf outlines in this piece.
I particularly liked her musings on women of the 16th Centu ...more
I particularly liked her musings on women of the 16th Centu ...more

This is a combination and extension of two speeches Woolf made in two women's colleges in Cambridge in 1928. Her thesis is that women need a fixed income and a room of their own to write fiction, and she illustrates this with a fictional (though I believe much of it is real) story about her efforts to find out the history of women and fiction. She talks about her own trials while conducting this research, such as not being allowed into a library as she is female, and the scarcity of information
...more

It was fascinating to read this alongside with White Fragility: Why It’s So Hard for White People to Talk About Racism - made me understand a lot more. Among other things how we ARE taking something away from them.
When one is used to be "teacher's pet", used to be the one who gets to choose first and leave what's not good for them for the rest to fight about, one loses something when one gets treated with the same respect and dignity and fairness with all the others.
If one has never needed to ...more
When one is used to be "teacher's pet", used to be the one who gets to choose first and leave what's not good for them for the rest to fight about, one loses something when one gets treated with the same respect and dignity and fairness with all the others.
If one has never needed to ...more

This was a challenging read for me. It took some time, as I could only digest it in small chunks. It was my first Virgina Woolf read. The basic premise of the necessity of a certain amount of money and "a room of one's own" being absolute musts in order for a woman to exercise her ability to write raises my eyebrows. Of course, I understand that Woolf was speaking to the women of 1929. I am certain that there was an elitism directed toward pursuing the arts, especially women and the arts. From m
...more

Jul 28, 2008
Shannan
marked it as to-read

Jul 13, 2009
Ruthi
rated it
it was amazing
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
my-favorites,
in-my-physical-library

Jun 12, 2013
Brynne
marked it as to-read

Aug 17, 2013
Melissa
added it

Jun 18, 2019
Sarah Lewis
marked it as to-read

Oct 06, 2020
Donna
added it

Jan 06, 2021
Annalisa Sofia
marked it as to-read

Jan 07, 2021
Enid S.
marked it as to-read


Oct 06, 2023
Viviana Martinez
marked it as to-read