Early Fiction
After he resigned from the colonial service, Leonard and Virginia married in August 1912. She continued to work on her first novel; he wrote the anticolonialist novel The Village in the Jungle (1913) and The Wise Virgins (1914), a Bloomsbury exposé. Then he became a political writer and an advocate for peace and justice.
Virginia and her husband Leonard ↑
Woolf’s
manic-depressive worries (that she was a failure as a writer and a woman, that
she was despised by Vanessa and unloved by Leonard) provoked a suicide attempt
in September 1913. Publication of The Voyage Out was delayed until early 1915;
then, that April, she sank into a distressed state in which she was often
delirious. Later that year she overcame the “vile imaginations” that had
threatened her sanity. She kept the demons of mania and depression mostly at
bay for the rest of her life. 
In 1917 the
Woolfs bought a printing press and founded the Hogarth Press, named for Hogarth
House, their home in the London suburbs. The Woolfs themselves (she was the
compositor while he worked the press) published their own Two Stories in the summer
of 1917. It consisted of Leonard’s Three Jews and Virginia’s The Mark on the
Wall, the latter about contemplation itself. 
Proving
that she could master the traditional form of the novel before breaking it, she
plotted her next novel in two romantic triangles, with its protagonist
Katharine in both. Night and Day (1919) answers Leonard’s The Wise Virgins, in
which he had his Leonard-like protagonist lose the Virginia-like beloved and
end up in a conventional marriage. In Night and Day, the Leonard-like Ralph
learns to value Katharine for herself, not as some superior being. And
Katharine overcomes (as Virginia had) class and familial prejudices to marry
the good and intelligent Ralph. This novel focuses on the very sort of details
that Woolf had deleted from The Voyage Out: credible dialogue, realistic
descriptions of early 20th-century settings, and investigations of issues such
as class, politics, and suffrage.

Woolf was
writing nearly a review a week for the Times Literary Supplement in 1918. Her
essay “Modern Novels” (1919; revised in 1925 as “Modern Fiction”) attacked the
“materialists” who wrote about superficial rather than spiritual or “luminous”
experiences. The Woolfs also printed by hand, with Vanessa Bell’s illustrations,
Virginia’s Kew Gardens (1919), a story organized, like a Post-Impressionistic
painting, by pattern. With the Hogarth Press’s emergence as a major publishing
house, the Woolfs gradually ceased being their own printers.

In 1921
Woolf’s minimally plotted short fictions were gathered in Monday or Tuesday.
Meanwhile, typesetting having heightened her sense of visual layout, she began
a new novel written in blocks to be surrounded by white spaces. In “On
Re-Reading Novels” (1922), Woolf argued that the novel was not so much a form
but an “emotion which you feel.” In Jacob’s Room (1922) she achieved such
emotion, transforming personal grief over the death of Thoby Stephen into a
“spiritual shape.” Though she takes Jacob from childhood to his early death in
war, she leaves out plot, conflict, even character. The emptiness of Jacob’s
room and the irrelevance of his belongings convey in their minimalism the
profound emptiness of loss. Though Jacob’s Room is an antiwar novel, Woolf
feared that she had ventured too far beyond representation. She vowed to “push
on,” as she wrote Clive Bell, to graft such experimental techniques onto
more-substantial characters.



Proving that she could master the traditional form of the novel before breaking it, she plotted her next novel in two romantic triangles, with its protagonist Katharine in both. Night and Day (1919) answers Leonard’s The Wise Virgins, in which he had his Leonard-like protagonist lose the Virginia-like beloved and end up in a conventional marriage. In Night and Day, the Leonard-like Ralph learns to value Katharine for herself, not as some superior being. And Katharine overcomes (as Virginia had) class and familial prejudices to marry the good and intelligent Ralph. This novel focuses on the very sort of details that Woolf had deleted from The Voyage Out: credible dialogue, realistic descriptions of early 20th-century settings, and investigations of issues such as class, politics, and suffrage.
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