

Meh. Whatever. It's out of the secret TBR cupboard where books go to be ignored.
#AuthorAMonth @Soubhiville
#BookSpinBingo @TheAromaofBooks
Meh. Whatever. It's out of the secret TBR cupboard where books go to be ignored.
#AuthorAMonth @Soubhiville
#BookSpinBingo @TheAromaofBooks
#VirginiaBloomsberries February discussion thread.
📚 What effect did the narrative style have on you as a reader?
📚 Do you consider the stylistic choices VW made, helped raise questions about truth, subjective experiences, authenticity, &reliable narrative?
📚 What did you consider the central theme to be?
All are welcome to join us. Let me know if you wish to be added/removed from the taglist.
Next up - https://litsy.com/p/SWU3ekxLejl2
Repost for @AllDebooks
#VirginiaBloomsberries
Our February #buddyread is VW's third novel, published in 1922, Jacob's Room. The main protagonist, Jacob Flanders, is revealed to us through the opinions of other characters.
All welcome to join us. Please let me know if you wish to be added/removed from the taglist.
Original post - https://www.litsy.com/web/post/2831789
#VirginiaBloomsberries
Our February #buddyread is VW's third novel, published in 1922, Jacob's Room. The main protagonist, Jacob Flanders, is revealed to us through the opinions of other characters. This is considered an important text as VW moves away from conventional plot driven fiction to a more experimental, modernist way of writing.
All welcome to join us. Please let me know if you wish to be added/removed from the taglist.
@LitsyEvents
repost for @AllDebooks:
#VirginiaBloomsberries
Here, we have our reading list for 2025. It's a good mix of her novels, short stories, esays, and biography. I'll tag them all in the comments for your perusal.
I can't wait to delve deeper into the world of Virginia Woolf. 📚📚📚
All are welcome to join us. Please let me know if you wish to be added/removed from the taglist.
original post:
https://www.litsy.com/web/post/2816284
#AlphabetGame @Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks
Letter J
I remember when I started this I thought that I wouldn't like it, but it turned out to be a really moving exploration of one man's life as seen through the eyes of others. You can sort of see Woolf experimenting with the form, yet it all somehow comes together and rearranges your perspective like an Impressionist painting.
Virginia Woolf is just not my style. I can appreciate the writing of individual passages, but the lack of plot generally leaves me bored. I tried reading this in print and could not seem to make progress, so I switched to audio and went back to read individual passages when I felt I was missing details.
#1001books #Reading1001 #TBRTakedown May 2021
#audiobook #SerialReader
Third in my reread of Virginia Woolf this year, I see why this isn‘t her most loved book but her prose always glitters so much I have to rate everything she‘s ever written as a pick. I think she‘s probably the best writer of prose in English I‘ve ever read, and even if this early novel (her first ‘major‘ novel though I‘m not exactly sure what that means) doesn‘t have her best characters or observations, it‘s still Virginia Woolf.
Yes! Virginia and I “have a thing going on” 🤓 I can‘t wait to launch into her third diary but I am going to read “Jacob‘s Room” first after I finish her second diary...Whew...
I love how she is sharing her life. Just as good as any reality show to me...
"Each had his past shut in him like the leaves of a book known to him by heart; and his friends could only read the title."
Had to be one I didn't love. ?
This is a transitional work. Stylistically it is the Woolf of Mrs Dalloway and To the Lighthouse, a novel composed of glimpses and fragments, bits and pieces of a life, broken interactions, meditations of what it all means. The writing is stirring, brilliant. And I savoured passages. BUT ⬇️
Spending Friday night on my parents' verandah, getting reacquainted with Virginia. (I've been neglecting her lately.)
A hard read. Couldn't wait to get done with it so I could move on to next yet took so long to finish-_- Felt bad for Bonamy though. Still don't have much of an idea as to Jacob's character.
"The observer is choked with observations" as rightly said by a Wordpress article.
I shouldn't have started with Jacob's Room when I had an entire collection of Woolf and now only a few days left before I have to return the book:(
#QuotsyFeb19 Day 26: What are we in #Search of, truly? This is a great question from Woolf herself. I have yet to read my Woolf novels! Perhaps for our #WomenReadWomen2019 theme.
"The lamps of London uphold the dark as upon the points of burning bayonets."
I know it sounds weird but I don't really do favorites in music, art, etc. However, now reading Jacob's Room, I realize that I do have a favorite author: Virginia Woolf. Whenever I read her writing, it's as if she's describing memories that are not mine but somehow already exist in my brain.
The #TBRBowlOfDestiny picked out my very first Virginia Woolf read! So far, so good! 😊
This is like an anti-Bildungsroman, impressionistic, essayistic, with brief sketches of a character--Jacob Flanders--whose name is his destiny. It is elegiac in a way; Jacob is representative of the young men who died during the war. It's also sly & satirical, where Woolf mocks patriarchy & male-centric academia & institutions. Even if the style is fragmented, Woolf's prose is fresh, original, a breath of fresh air; the scenes unfold like a film.
Tired, sad flowers after a morning of rain and an afternoon of clouds, and a book I haven't read yet. #startswithJ #AndItsAugust @RealLifeReading
What a fight, this one. My mind kept wandering and Woolf did nothing to prevent it.
A book consisting of fragments of the lives of people around Jacob. Himself we hardly get to know.
I am having troubles liking Virginia Woolf. O yes, I liked Orlando and Mrs Dalloway but I just can't relate to her experimental novels, like The Waves and this one.
#1001books
How amazing is this cover. 😍 #ihavethisthingwithbookcovers