Vanessa and Virginia
(häftad)av Susan Sellers
(Bookdata)
Fler böcker av Susan Sellers
Vanessa och VirginiaSusan Sellers (inbunden) |
The Cambridge Companion to Virginia WoolfSusan Sellers (häftad) |
Three Steps on the Ladder of WritingHelene Cixous, Susan Sellers (häftad) |
The Helene Cixous ReaderHelene Cixous, Susan Sellers (häftad) | |||
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173:- Köp
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169:- Köp
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182:- Köp
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286:- Köp
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Kundrecensioner
Recensioner i media
'A beautiful, haunting novel about the love, the rivalry between two gifted sisters, and the real purpose of Art. The achievement here is an uncanny, utterly persuasive empathy for both sisters, and the world and times in which they lived.' John Burnside' Deftly, apparently effortlessly, Susan Sellers's novel of love, art, and sexual jealousy gives us convincing and intimate access to the relationship between two remarkable sisters. At once pellucid and sophisticated, Vanessa and Virginia is quite simply a pleasure to read.' Robert Crawford "In short, disconnected scenes of exquisite description and nuanced emotion, Susan Sellers invites us to assemble the pieces into a picture not only of the Bloomsbury circle, but of the exigencies of creative work as outlet, devotion, and anchor. A fascinating, compelling novel written with authority and tenderness." Susan Vreeland 'Reading Vanessa and Virginia is like swimming across the seabed of the minds of sisters Woolf and Bell - everywhere there are fragments of paintings and scenes from novels and lyrical phrases scattered like sunken treasure. It is a novel both exquisite and haunting. A triumph of the imagination.' Rebecca Stott, author of Ghostwalk
(Bookdata)
Bloggat om Vanessa and Virginia
Övrig information
After a nomadic childhood, Susan Sellers ran away to Paris. She worked as a barmaid, tour guide and nanny, bluffed her way as a software translator and co-wrote a film script with a Hollywood screen writer. Closely involved with leading French feminist writers such as Helene Cixous, she was among the first to introduce their work to the English-speaking world. From Paris she travelled to Swaziland, teaching English to tribal grandmothers, and to Peru, where she worked for a women's aid agency. She moved to Scotland and in 2002 won the Canongate Prize for New Writing. She now lives mostly near Cambridge with her husband, a composer, and a young son, but is a part-time lecturer in English literature at St Andrews University. She has published short stories and a number of books and translations; this is her first novel.
(Bookdata)