Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 371 pp., $12.95
Cambridge University Press, 285 pp., $11.95
Oxford University Press, 298 pp., $12.95
There has of late been a transformation in the fortunes of Virginia Woolf. It is not that she has belatedly grown famous; her name has been a household word since the mid-Twenties, and even at the start of that decade she was able, as this new diary shows us, to predict with sardonic accuracy the reactions of reviewers ('Mrs Woolf must beware of virtuosity. She must beware of obscurity her great natural gifts &c . She is at her best in the simple lyric '). She lived to see a good deal written about her; and even in the years when her reputation went into its posthumous slump there was a steady stream of books and articles. But what is happening at the moment transcends mere fashion. She is being received into the canon.
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