“Virginia Woolf was a writer’s writer. For as many moments of artistic despair as there are, one also finds glimmers of hope, of faith in the process. In 1933, she wrote, “I must not let myself believe that I’m simply a ladylike prattler: […] No, I must say to myself, this is a mere wisp, a veil of water; and so create, hardly, fiercely, as I feel now more able to do than ever before.” In 1934, she spoke directly to those of us who would come after her: “A note, by way of advising other Virginias with other books that this is the way of the thing: up down up down – and Lord knows the truth.””
from On Reading Virginia Woolf’s Diary by Dana Staves (via bookriot)
Stephanie Doty
Women’s Issues Matter
July 23, 2014
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/
Women’s Issues Matter
July 23, 2014
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/