Virginia Woolf was an English writer who became famous for her nonlinear prose style of writing. She was born January 25, 1882, making her the third oldest out of her family. Her two famous novels that she used the free flowing style were Mrs. Dalloway and To the Lighthouse. Adeline Virginia Stephen was her original name and she was raised by independent parents. When she was a young child, she published her first novel, The Voyage Out, in 1915. Virginia was known for having deep depression and mood swings, which make it hard for her to write sometimes. She committed suicide on March 28, 1941; at age 59, from depression. When Virginia Woolf was growing up she had a father named, Leslie Stephen, was the first editor of the Dictionary of National …show more content…
Two years later her half sister, Stella died at age twenty- eight and Virginia out in her diary as “impossible to write of.” In 1904, her father died and Virginia could not take it anymore. She tried to take her mind off of everything and started to take classes in German, Greek, and Latin at the Ladies’ Department of King’s College in London. In her early twenty’s Vanessa and Adrian thought it was a good idea to move to Bloomsbury in London. Virginia made friends and started a group called Bloomsbury Group and the the people that were in this group were artists and brilliant people who become famous for their Dreadnought hoax. She met the love of her life Leonard Woolf, and they got married 1912. To the Lighthouse, is a novel about childhood emotion and shows the adults having a good relationship, just like they have one in real life. Just like in Virginias they were problems and people dying. This novel has themes about losing, and problem of perception.
This quotation in to the light house, "she must admit that she felt this thing she called life terrible, hostile, and quick to pounce on you if you gave it a chance” (Woolf 56-60) is just like her life. Virginia though her life was terrible just like the girl in the