"The book in Bloomsbury is a joke, in Mayfair a necessity, and in America a classic."
This page provides information on Virginia Woolf and her novel, Orlando.
Features:
~ Elizabeth Bowen was first a devotee, and then an acquaintance, of Virginia Woolf. In 1960, she looked back upon perceptions of Orlando in an afterword.
~ A detailed year-by-year chronology of the author's life was compiled by John Lehmann (Woolf's associate from the Hogarth Press).
~ Learn about a scandal in English literature that coincided with the publication of the racy Orlando.
Links:
~ Cool essays by Kelly Tetterton: Virginia Woolf's Orlando: The Book as Critic, and Paperbacks as an Area of Bibliographical Study: The Case of Virginia Woolf's Orlando.
~ Believe it or not, Orlando's life's work, The Oak Tree, was recently adapted into a high-profile Cantonese play and performed in Hong Kong. In 1993, for a run of 135 shows, Isabelle Huppert starred in Orlando in Paris, directed by Bob Wilson.
~ The Major Authors Virginia Woolf CD-ROM is now available online by subscription. It includes manuscripts, complete texts, glossaries, biographies, even audio clips.
~ A resource for information on her life and works: Virginia Woolf Web.
~ The leisurely life of Vita Sackville-West, inspiration for Orlando, is summarized by the South Bank University.
~ Orlando is one of the best GLBT novels, according to Triangle Publishing Group.
~ Orlanda, a novel by French author Jacqueline Harpman, is an homage to Orlando. It follows Aline, a professor of literature in Belgium. At a Paris train station, she experiences an odd connection with a young man, Lucien, who is also travelling to Brussels. Learn more about Orlanda at amazon.com.