The Death of the Moth and Other Essays Paperback – October 23, 1974
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The Death of the Moth and Other Essays Paperback – October 23, 1974

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4.7

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R**R

Excellent collection from a great writer.

Brilliant, as expected. Although I was tiring of reading about Horace Walpole early on, the first and last essays (“The Death of the Moth” and “Thoughts on Peace in an Air Raid”) were more than enough to make up for stuffy Horace and his crowd. I also enjoyed the Henry James section. Woolf fans will probably like this collection, I know I did.

E**D

The incomparable Mrs. Woolf

Mrs. Woolf "on Craftsmanship" is extraordinary. Worth the price of the entire book.

R**N

Kicking Against The Pricks

Virginia Woolf had an unfortunate life, beginning with her family relationships, notably having the ill-tempered and depressive Leslie Stephen for a father. Early on, she exhibited the symptoms of mental illness (most likely bi-polar disorder for which there was no effective treament in her lifetime) and had several psychotic episodes and hospitalizations. Leonard, her husband, was apparently an understanding and supportive man, though her sex life with him was unsatisfactory, even less than her affair with Vita Sackville-West, who by all accounts was a bitch supreme, who managed to have a happy marriage with Harold Nicholson mostly because he and she were more homosexual than heter.With all this misfortune, you almost have to hope that Virginia's career as a writer had been more successful. Primarily, she hoped to be a major novelist, but the majority of her fiction, written in part to demonstrate the irrelevance of "realism", is mediocre, excepting perhaps TO THE LIGHTHOUSE, which survives largely because of the animus towards her father, the inspiration for one of the characters. (Her first novels--THE VOYAGE OUT and NIGHT AND DAY--are realistic, but they're minor works, if not exactly juvenilia.)As someone has said, her books are like paintings with lots of color and texture but no draughtsmanship. The "luminous halo" she sought to portray eludes her and stultifies her reader.Her real gift was for the essay form and literary criticism. The book under review and her two volumes of THE COMMON READER are her greatest achievements. Why she wasn't satisfied with being a good essayist and critic mystifies me. How many good essayists and critics have written worthwhile fiction? Trilling's lone novel is second-rate, Edmund Wilson's fiction the same, Raymond Williams and V.S. Pritchett wrote bad novels (though something could be said for the latter's short stories). And going back further Sainte-Beuve's VOLUPTE is far inferior to his causeries. Hazlitt never attempted fiction, neither did Matthew Arnold or T.S. Eliot; and I can only speculate how awful a novel F.R. Leavis or Queenie would have produced.Doing what you do well ought to be enough, but apparently writers like Virgina Woolf never think so.

R**S

Five Stars

The best essayist ever!

S**T

Five Stars

Perfect copy and prompt delivery. Thank you.

J**Y

A new look on life

I was lying on the floor, nominally exercising but really just taking time off from gravity, when I noticed a small piece of fuzz on the carpet. Pinching it between forefinger and thumb, I realized it was a small moth crushed now in my fingers, as soft as lint. Oh yuck, I thought, and good riddance too, darned thing and its cousins probably feasting on my winter wool wardrobe.Virginia Woolf, however, has more moth compassion in her four page essay than I've mustered in a lifetime. "The possibilities of pleasure seemed that morning so enormous and so various that to have only a moth's part in life...appeared a hard fate, and his zest in enjoying his meagre opportunities to the full, pathetic." She stuck with Moth-Guy to his end, musing over life force and death. And that is why I loll on floors and she authors books.Best essay of all in this book was "Street Haunting" wherein an early evening walk in winter through London streets "gives us the irresponsibility which darkness and lamplight bestow. We are no longer quite ourselves." She proceeds on a 14 page meditative journey through the streets and shops of central London.The bulk of the book's entries are literary criticism for which I have no background to appreciate. But the first five essays are definite jewels.

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