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3725652Night and Day — AdvertisementsVirginia Woolf

THE VOYAGE OUT

A Novel

BY

VIRGINIA WOOLF


SOME PRESS OPINIONS

. . . And perhaps the first comment to make on ‘The Voyage Out’ is that it is absolutely unafraid, and that its courage springs, not from naïveté, but from education. Few women writers are educated. . . . Here at last is a book which attains unity as surely as ‘Wuthering Heights,’ though by a different path, a book which, while written by a woman and presumably from a woman’s point of view, soars straight out of local questionings into the intellectual day. The curious male may pick up a few scraps, but if he is wise he will lift his eyes to where there is neither marrying nor giving in marriage, to the mountains and forest and sea that circumscribe the characters and to the final darkness that blots them out. After all he will not have learnt how women live, any more than he has learnt from Shakespeare how men perform that process; he will only have lived more intensely himself, that is to say, will have encountered literature. . . . Some readers—those who demand the milk of human kindness even in its tinned form—will say that she has not succeeded; but the bigness of her achievement should impress any one weaned from baby-food. She believes in adventure—here is the main point—believes in it passionately, and knows that it can only be undertaken alone. . . . Mrs. Woolf’s vision may be inferior to Dostoevsky’s—but she sees as clearly as he where efficiency ends and creation begins, and even more clearly that our supreme choice lies not between body and soul, but between immobility and motion. . . . It is tempting to analyse the closing chapters, which have an atmosphere unknown in English literature—the atmosphere of Jules Romains’ ‘Mort de Quelqu’un.’ But a word must be said about the comedy; the book is extremely amusing. . . . The writer can sweep together masses of characters for our amusement, then sweep them away; her comedy does not counteract her tragedy, and at the close enhances it . . . for we see that existence will continue the same for every one, for every one except the reader; he, more fortunate than the actors, is established in the possession of beauty.”—E. M. Forster in the Daily News.

“Mrs. Woolf’s book, ‘The Voyage Out,’ is that rarest of things, a novel of serious artistic value. Some of its readers may find it irritating or even boring at moments; but none of them is likely to find it unimportant. A few will even be enthusiastic, and will almost be inclined to hail the author as a genius, and the story as a classic. . . . Mrs. Woolf is by no means a mere bleak realist. One of her greatest gifts is satirical. . . . The visitors at the hotel, each of them a distinct portrait, mockingly though sympathetically painted, form an astonishingly brilliant group. . . . Not only does Mrs. Woolf possess a keen intellect, but she has imagination as well of a strange and individual sort. Her pages are filled with delightful and unexpected comparisons and brilliantly coloured descriptions. . . . Above all, perhaps, Mrs. Woolf is a consummate artist in writing. . . .”—Spectator.

“This is just the story of a voyage . . . but the filling in is done with something startlingly like genius. That is not a word to use inadvisedly, but there is something greater than talent that colours the cleverness of this book. Its perpetual effort to say the real thing and not the expected thing, its humour and its sense of irony, the occasional poignancy of its emotions, its profound originality—well, one does not wish to lose the critical faculty over any book, and its hold may be a personal and subjective matter, but among ordinary novels it is a wild swan among good grey geese to one reviewer, to whom its author’s name is entirely new and unknown.”—Observer.

. . . the book is written with genius. Genius is very hard to define, and a word used much too light-heartedly by reviewers. But every one when he has finished reading a book which possesses it, is conscious of that particular sensation as though a window had been opened in the mind. . . . To try to estimate the comparative sizes of the windows opened by Dostoevsky, say, and Mrs. Woolf is unnecessary. The important and splendid thing is that here is a new writer capable of opening windows. . . . Mrs. Woolf has given us with no alloy of what she ought to feel or what other people have felt the full reaction to the world of her rare mind, mocking, fantastic, piercing and mystical. No reader will ever forget her description of a girl’s bewildered falling into the depths of love, or of the unbelievable approach of death. Yet it is likely enough that to many people Mrs. Woolf’s abounding wit will appeal more than any of her other qualities . . . .—Country Life.

“From the first few pages of this book we felt that we had come across a writer of rare and original power, and we are delighted to find that that view is held by all the critics who have devoted space to the review of this book. The plot matters little . . . but the thing that does matter is the view of life there given, and the art with which that view is presented . . . which can only be described as wonderful. . . . The whole book carries the reader along with an abandon that cannot be resisted. . . . For all who care for the novel as a form of expression of the highest importance this book will come as a revelation.”—Birmingham News.

“The outstanding feature of this novel is the remarkable manner in which the characters are made to exhibit and develop themselves in dialogue. We have read many a novel with as much conversation in it, but we have not often read a novel, and especially a first novel, if such this be, with so much conversation which is at once so full of character, and sustained on so high a level. . . . The end is sad in the sense that death intervenes, but somehow it seems a proper finish to a book of very remarkable power. The author has a wonderful grip of human nature, and her observation is of exceptional keenness, as a hundred points bring out.”—Pall Mall Gazette.

A writer with such perceptions should be capable of great things. . . . If this is a first novel, as we believe it to be, it is a very remarkable one; there is not merely promise but accomplishment.”—Manchester Guardian.

“One might declare the season blank of fresh talent unless one chanced on ‘The Voyage Out.’ It is an unusual book, and a particularly unusual book from a woman. . . . This is tragedy after the manner of the great masters, and a wonderful ending to a capably written book.”—Standard.

“‘The Voyage Out’ provides a welcome emotion—surprise. It is a really unusual book, and better still an unusually good book. Its strangeness is a little disconcerting at first, but very soon it catches hold and is amazingly interesting. The secret of its unlikeness to the general run of novels is in this: the author is not inventing a number of people, labelling them . . . but presenting them as real men and women, complex and various. . . . Thus it follows that watching the lives of these men and women . . . is as deeply interesting and more possible than the study of acquaintances.Field.

“It is difficult to define the exact quality which gives such a sense of reality to Mrs. Woolf’s story. It has practically no plot, there is no character for whom we feel any intimate affection, and the humour is rather of that frankly coarse nature which appeals to undergraduates. And yet from the first page to the last the book is extraordinarily vital.”—Queen.
Crown 8vo, 458 pages
6s. net


DUCKWORTH AND COMPANY

Publishers

Covent Garden, London, W.C.2