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Letters to Virginia Woolf is a lyrical memoir and a meditation on Woolf?s life and writings, particularly her relevance in this chaotic post 9/11 time period. The book also deeply examines contemporary women?s experience within the context of Woolf's enduring importance. While Woolf was not a mother,
Williams looks at the experience of becoming a mother later in life and the ensuing fertility issues that go along with that decision. She writes this
within the context of Woolf's statement that she succeeded in killing off The Victorian Angel in the House, but could never write the truth about her body.
Williams explores Woolf's themes of memory, childhood, and loss as she writes of her own experiences with these very issues.
RECENTLY RELEASED REVIEWS
"For those readers who are more engaged
with Woolf's internal life and a writer's creative process
toward self-discovery, Letters to Virginia Woolf offers a potential
touchstone."—June Elizabeth Dunn, Woolf
Studies Annual
"....Williams emerges as a strong creative
voice, tempting hubris on all levels, walking honestly through
a shock of personal and global dimensions, and finally, standing
with Virginia Woolf as a woman whose country is the whole world."—Suzanne
Bellamy, Lifewriting Annual
" Williams knows how to write prose
and does so with skillful precision. Whether eloquent, blunt,
or a cunning combination of the two, she picks apart some
of the most intriguing experiences she has faced and lays
them down on paper for her readers without apology or personal
bias. What makes the book work so well as a memoir is that
Williams does not pretend to speak for all women, but still
manages to write in a style that gives a universality to
her experiences, thus creating a strong sense of kinship
with female readers."—Angela B. Wade,
Calyx
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"Few write with more honesty and lyricism about tough issues than Lisa Williams in 'Letters to Virginia Woolf.' Williams faces the complexity of adolescence, divorce, childbirth, death and war with heartfelt intelligence, reminding us that struggle and loss often lead to an appreciation of life's wonder. Like Woolf who grappled with 'The Angel in the House' almost a century ago, Williams continues to wrestle with the luminous presence of the past as she peels back 'layers of selves we outgrow but never discard.' 'Letters to Virginia Woolf' guides us through this world of contradiction and offers hope for the dangerous time in which we live."—Chella Courington, author, Southern Girl Gone Wrong
"Every once in a while a book comes your way, almost as if from out of the ether, that moves you to such an extent it forces you, at all costs, to make other people read it too. Lisa Williams's Letters to Virginia Woolf seems to be one of those books. "—Lee John Rourke, Managing Editor , Scarecrow Reviews
"Pure poetry, 'Letters to Virginia Woolf' is a book not only of considerable significance--I am convinced Woolf herself would sit up and listen to it if she could."—Lisa Low, editor, Milton, The Metaphysicals and Romanticism
"'Letters to Virginia Woolf' takes a fresh look at the enduring impact of Woolf's legacy. This grippingly personal testimony of the value of female influence demonstrates the bonding power of women's creative imagination. Lisa Williams successfully demonstrates how to communicate across boundaries of difference and in the process helps to make Woolf accessible across cultures."—Tuzyline
Jita Allan, English Department, Baruch College, City University of New York
"Lisa Williams's Letters to Virginia Woolf is a spare and lovely book;
probably three parts memoir to one part literary appreciation of the work
of Virginia Woolf." Taking the character of the shell shocked soldier, Septimus
(from Mrs Dalloway), and Woolf's own pacifist views the author initially
reflects on the continuing pain and anxiety flowing from the events of 9/11.
Memory and the shadow of the past are also strong themes and she deals, in
pared down, sometimes poetic prose, with unhappy ghosts from her own history...
As she does so, she reflects on how far she has managed to fulfil Virginia
Woolf's ambition to kill off what Woolf termed the 'Angel in the House'.
At first I was unsure about the letter format, but was quickly converted:
Lisa Williams's use of Woolf's work is sensitive and apt, illuminating both
the original quote and its relevance to our situation in the twenty-first
century."—Sandra MacDonald , editor, Book World
"Because the book is so accessible, it will help readers who are 'afraid of Virginia Woolf,' and will appeal to many women on many levels. It will not exclude male readership. This is a great service to all readers of Virginia Woolf."—Jane Lilienfeld, Professor of English, Lincoln University of Missouri
BIO
Lisa Williams’s book of creative nonfiction,
Letters to Virginia Woolf, was recently published by Hamilton Books (June
30, 2005). She is also the author of The Artist as Outsider in the Novels
of Toni Morrison and Virginia Woolf (Greenwood Press, 2000). She is a Professor
of Literature at Ramapo College of New Jersey, and lives in New York City.