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🖊️ A single mark. A wandering mind. A universe of thought. In The Mark on the Wall, Virginia Woolf redefines fiction through an interior monologue that drifts from a small detail in a room to deep reflections on life, knowledge, history, and the self. With lyrical precision and stream-of-consciousness mastery, Woolf invites readers to journey inward—where nothing and everything happens 🌀🪞. This edition includes annotations, literary commentary, and context to Woolf's groundbreaking style, ideal for students, scholars, and readers who enjoy introspective, philosophical fiction. "A landmark in literary modernism." — The Times Literary Supplement "What Woolf achieves in a few pages, many writers can't in a novel." — Modern Fiction Studies 📖 Click Buy Now to step into one of the earliest and most intimate examples of stream-of-consciousness storytelling.
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Virginia Woolf
Virginia Woolf (1882–1941) was a pioneering English writer, essayist, and modernist thinker. A key figure in the literary world of the early 20th century, she is best known for her experimental narrative techniques and profound psychological insights.
Born into an intellectual family in London, Woolf was exposed to literature from an early age. She became one of the leading members of the Bloomsbury Group, an influential collective of writers, artists, and philosophers. Her works, including Mrs Dalloway (1925), To the Lighthouse (1927), and Orlando (1928), broke traditional literary conventions by exploring stream-of-consciousness narration and shifting perspectives.
Woolf’s essays, particularly A Room of One’s Own (1929), remain vital feminist texts advocating for women's intellectual and creative independence. Her writing challenged societal norms, addressed mental health, and examined the fluidity of identity.
Despite her literary success, Woolf struggled with mental illness throughout her life. She tragically ended her life in 1941, but her influence endures, shaping modern literature and feminist thought.