Mrs Dalloway

Regular price €23.99
A Room of One's Own
A01=Mark Hussey
Author_Mark Hussey
Between the Acts
bibliomemoir
biography of a novel
Bloomsbury Group
Bloomsbury Set
bohemian Bloomsbury
Category=D
Category=DS
Category=DSK
Clarissa Dalloway
Clive Bell
Dallowday
Deborah Levy
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Hogarth Press
interwar literature
Jacob's Room
Leonard Woolf
literary introduction
literary modernism
modernist literature
Mrs Dalloway
Nicole Kidman
Orlando
Septimus Warren Smith
stream of consciousness
The Hours
Three Guineas
To the Lighthouse
Vanessa Bell
Vanessa Redgrave
Virginia Woolf
Vita Sackville-West

Product details

  • ISBN 9781526176813
  • Weight: 467g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 13 May 2025
  • Publisher: Manchester University Press
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The first book in the ‘Biography of a novel’ series offers a compelling account of Virginia Woolf’s masterpiece.

The fourth and best-known of Virginia Woolf’s novels, Mrs Dalloway is a modernist masterpiece that has remained popular since its publication in 1925. Its dual narratives follow a day in the life of wealthy housewife Clarissa Dalloway and shell-shocked war veteran Septimus Warren Smith, capturing their inner worlds with a vividness that has rarely been equalled.

Mrs Dalloway: Biography of a novel offers new readers a lively introduction to this enduring classic, while providing Woolf lovers with a wealth of information about the novel’s writing, publication and reception. It follows Woolf’s process from the first stirrings in her diary through her struggles to create what was quickly recognised as a major advance in prose fiction. It then traces the novel’s remarkable legacy to the present day.

Woolf wrote in her diary that she wanted her novel ‘to give life & death, sanity & insanity… to criticise the social system, & to show it at work, at its most intense.’ Mrs Dalloway: Biography of a novel reveals how she achieved this ambition, creating a book that will be read by generations to come.

Mark Hussey is Distinguished Professor of English Emeritus at Pace University in New York. He is founding editor of Woolf Studies Annual and general editor of the Harcourt Annotated Edition of the Works of Virginia Woolf, for which he edited To the Lighthouse. His recent publications include Clive Bell and the Making of Modernism (2022) and Modernism's Print Cultures (with Faye Hammill, 2016).