![]() Two lady scholars from America - a country she always thought showed signs of being restless - found them, and are thanked for this collection by Mr. This 1927 review is published in "Granite and Rainbow." It seems there were still pieces left out by Virginia Woolf herself wen she put together both series of "The Common Reader" and that eluded her husband when he published threeīooks of her papers after she was dead. But the true writer stands close up to the bull and lets the horns - call them life, truth, reality, whatever you like - pass him close each "lets his dexterity, like the bullfighter's cloak, get between him and the fact ***. (The title she decided merely "to stare out of countenance.") She thought Hemingway's characters talked too much, but she would, "if life were longer," care to read the stories again. ![]() ![]() The New York Herald Tribune received a veryįarsighted review. F course, an editor who set out a new book called "Men Without Women" to Virginia Woolf knew what he was doing. ![]()
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