Lisa Williams, an associate professor of literature at Ramapo College has been making the rounds in the blogosphere this year, stopping in at fine sites like Beatrice and Ready Steady Books to discuss Letters to Virginia Woolf, her "lyrical memoir and meditation on Woolf's life and writing." But this is no dry academic text, and the book ranges in subject matter from 9/11 to divorce and childbirth to death and war.
Told in six parts which leap off from 9/11 and incorporate Woolf's own thoughts and writing along the way, Williams delivers a heartfelt and elegant anti-war statement without stridency or self-righteousness. The effect is quiet and gradual and, in these unfortunate times, surprisingly salutary.
We tend to get a bit itchy when people talk about "the meanings of the holidays" and the like, but one is hard pressed to think of a better time to give this worthwhile effort your attention - and to support a worthy small press in the process.
Visit the author's website.
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