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A Room of One's Own (Penguin Modern Classics)

A Room of One's Own (Penguin Modern Classics)

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Author: Virginia Woolf
Publisher: Penguin Classics
Category: Book

List Price: £5.99
Buy New: £1.82
You Save: £4.17 (70%)



New (14) Used (8) from £1.48

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 4 reviews
Sales Rank: 10996

Media: Paperback
Edition: New Ed
Pages: 112
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 7.7 x 4.9 x 0.4

ISBN: 0141183535
Dewey Decimal Number: 808
EAN: 9780141183534
ASIN: 0141183535

Publication Date: February 28, 2002
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: BRAND NEW - ***Delivery usually * 2 - 3 * working days - From Aphrohead of SOUTHPORT, Lancs, uk *** . Priority Airmail used Worldwide on International orders. Thanks from all at Aphrohead.

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - A Room of One's Own (Flamingo Modern Classics)
  • Audio Cassette - A Room of One's Own (Penguin Audiobooks)
  • Hardcover - A Room of One's Own
  • Hardcover - A Room of One's Own (HBJ Modern Classic)
  • Paperback - Room of One's Own
  • Paperback - A Room of One's Own
  • Paperback - A Room of One's Own (Cambridge Literature)
  • Paperback - A Room of One's Own
  • Turtleback - A Room of One's Own
  • Hardcover - A Room of One's Own
  • Paperback - A Room of One's Own
  • Hardcover - A Room of One's Own (Bloomsbury Classic)
  • Hardcover - A Room of One's Own
  • Hardcover - Room of Ones Own (Thorndike Classics)
  • Unbound - A Room of Ones Own (Hbj Modern Classic)
  • School & Library Binding - Room of One's Own
  • Hardcover - A Room of One's Own
  • Hardcover - Room of Ones' Own
  • Audio Cassette - Room of One's Own
  • Paperback - Room of One's Own (Canada Only) Pb
  • Hardcover - A Room of One's Own
  • Paperback - A Room of One's Own
  • Audio Cassette - A Room of One's Own
  • Paperback - A Room of One's Own (UBSPD's World Classics)
  • Paperback - A Room of One's Own ('Zi ji de fang jian', in traditional Chinese, NOT in English)
  • Paperback - A Room of One's Own (Penguin Twentieth Century Classics)

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Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Excellent and inspiring.   December 4, 2004
Mrs. J. A. Collins (Hertfordshire)
9 out of 12 found this review helpful

This book has so much more to offer than simply a treatise on the feminist needs of creative women (although this is a very important topic, and as relevant now as when Woolf wrote her essays); it also offers excellent advice on the art of writing well, and the need for a good writer to resist the urge to use their craft as a stage from which to proclaim their views. I already know this book will have a profound effect on my own writing, and for that alone it thoroughly deserves five stars.


3 out of 5 stars Gets to the point eventually...   May 17, 2004
3 out of 13 found this review helpful

I found this book slightly tiring and difficult at times, but finishing it can see Woolfs point about women coming up trumps.

No introduction or illustrations.


5 out of 5 stars Concise and Invigorating   March 16, 2003
39 out of 39 found this review helpful

Asked originally to deliver a talk on Women and Fiction in 1928, Virginia Woolf eventually produced this longer essay which expands its subject to cover education, marriage, property and money. She moves backwards through literary history, examining the women who have written, often against great opposition, and the female characters that have been written, mostly by men, and finds a startling anomaly: "Imaginatively she is of the highest importance; practically she is completely insignificant."

Unlike many feminist authors, Woolf does not argue for tearing down the achievements of male authors. In fact she argues that both sexes should write androgynously, in order to find the proper reality of things, but at its heart it is a feminist essay. At the time Woolf was writing women had been granted many more freedoms than their mothers, but still had a lot to fight for, and she urges women to do so, albeit for the realm of intellectual freedom and the pleasure of writing for a living. (I have no doubt she would do the same today, despite all our apparent advances.)

She knew she was one of the fortunate (she was left five hundred pounds a year by her aunt, giving her economic independence) and she famously concludes that a women must have a room of her own and money of her own in order to write. But why? It is not so that there are idle hours to be filled by writing - it is because writing well and truthfully can only be properly achieved when a woman is not railing against the bounds of poverty, dependence, social exclusion and disapproval.

The essay is, however, also art. Unlike a dry academic paper it skips lightly and often with humour from subject to observation, and demonstrates with her usual deftness how the real world produces new trains of thought in a person, just as a person's thoughts can mean interpreting the world in a new way. The very construction of the essay is an example of the work she is promoting, to attempt "to live in the presence of reality, an invigorating life." Because of this, and the sheer energy of the writing, it is a work that deserves a reading, no matter what your sex or station or ambition. And if you are a woman intending to write, be it a novel, travelogue or PHD you really ought to give up a couple of hours to read this; you are almost certainly guaranteed a new enthusiasm for your task.


5 out of 5 stars Wonderful essay, demonstrating fantastic cultural insight.   April 5, 2001
12 out of 12 found this review helpful

'A Room of One's Own' is an extremely readable essay. It's a delightful read and the classification of it as an 'essay' should not put anyone off as it is as entertaining as any of Woolf's prose. Once I started reading it I could not stop. Woolf flirts with you through her narrative, drawing you in to her thought processes, enticing you to follow her narrator on a journey of the mind as she wanders about 'Oxbridge' and London. Woolf demonstrates great insight, forseeing the future for women and their involvement in the arts with great accuracy. Through her narrative she also introduces a new discourse, one that she encourages other women to take up in order to free themselves from the masculine domination of literature. Inspirational.

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