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Virginia Woolf (née Stephen) (1882-1941), Novelist and critic; sister of Vanessa Bell

Sitter in 62 portraits
Novelist, essayist, biographer and critic. The third child of Leslie and Julia Stephen, and sister of Vanessa (later Bell) she was a central figure in Bloomsbury. With Vanessa, in 1905 she acted as hostess for the Thursday evening gatherings held at 46 Gordon Square that formed the nucleus of Old Bloomsbury. Despite intermittent bouts of mental illness her many novels, notably Night and Day (1919) and Jacob's Room (1922), Mrs Dalloway (1925), To the Lighthouse (1927), and The Waves (1931), transformed ideas about structure, plot and characterisation, and are an important literary legacy. She committed suicide in 1941.

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Ax13013

Lytton Strachey; Virginia Woolf (née Stephen)

by Lady Ottoline Morrell
vintage snapshot print, June 1923
NPG Ax13013

D36291

Virginia Woolf

by Steven Edles
photographic reproduction, 20th century
NPG D36291

Family Tree
Woolf
Related People
Julian Heward Bell (nephew)
Quentin Claudian Stephen Bell (nephew)
Vanessa Bell (née Stephen) (sister)
(Karin) Judith Henderson (née Stephen) (niece)
Adrian Stephen (brother)
Sir James Stephen (grandfather)
Julia Prinsep Stephen (née Jackson; formerly Mrs Duckworth) (mother)
Sir Leslie Stephen (father)
Thoby Stephen (brother)
Ann Davies Synge (née Stephen) (niece)
Leonard Sidney Woolf (husband)
Links
Charleston, Lewes, East Sussex
Monk's House, Lewes, East Sussex
Virginia Woolf Society
Category
Literature, Journalism and Publishing
Groups
Bloomsbury
Novelists and authors
Women writers
Writers and critics
Places
London
Sussex