Probably Virginia Woolfโs best-known novel, Mrs. Dalloway, originally published in 1925, is a glorious, ground-breaking text. On the surface, it follows Clarissa Dalloway, an Englishwoman in her fifties, minute by minute through the June day on which she is having a party. At a deeper level, however, the novel demonstrates, through an effortless stream of consciousness, the connections formed in human interactionโwhether these interactions are fleeting, or persist through decades.
This is a novel to read and cherish, if only to marvel at Woolfโs linguistic acrobatics. Words and phrases swoop and soar like swallows. Woolfโs sentences are magnificent: sinuous, whirling, impeccably detailed. As narrative perspective shifts from character to characterโsometimes within a single sentenceโreaders come to understand the oh-so-permeable barrier between self and other. Through Clarissa we meet Septimus Warren Smith, his wife Rezia, and a cast of dozens more, all connected by the โleaden circlesโ of Big Ben marking the passage of every hour, by the pavements of Bloomsbury that lead everywhere and nowhere. Modernist London has never been portrayed more sublimely: replete with birdsong and flowers, resplendent in sunshine, youthful yet eternalโand even in the aftermath of war and pandemic, resilient.
Mrs. Dalloway is Woolfโs attempt to express that which may be inexpressible. It offers a close examination of how difficult it is, even when our hearts are brimming, to say what we really feel; and it examines the damage we inflict through our reticence with words, our withholding of love. It is a novel of the soul, and a work of immense beauty.
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