I knew nothing about Virginia Woolf save the fame of her name a week ago, and I must admit, after reading what Google pointed to as the easiest to read for Woolf beginners; Mrs. Dalloway, I still don't have a clear understanding of what she's supposed to represent.
What to say? The novel is incredibly fluid, changing from one character's point of view to the next's with the theatrical style of a camera swinging in one seamless move. It's remarkable, really, as you hardly realize it's happening until it has, and your mind has to play catch-up.
The fact that the main characters are elderly came as a shock to me as well. It so rarely happens, and even less so when it relates to the bourgeois and events like fancy dinner parties. I must say the fact that my book's cover had a photograph of ladies in their twenties did not help the matter.
I enjoyed the moments shared between Peter and Sally best. And though I cannot say I was especially pulled by the novel as a whole, the final section was provoking. I like the draw of the past, and the reality of emotions vs. rationality in fiction because one cannot really experience that of other people in real life. Life choices...am I right?
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