Quark, I like your view of the matter because I think it is the direction I lean when reading a novel.
Mrs Woolf set out to write a novel, that is to say, to create a fictional setting, place fictional characters in the setting, give them personalities, and have their thoughts and interactions move the plot forward. I think we should be able to see and describe at least that much within the framework of the novel, without appealing to outside evidence.
That the story may have contacts with reality in her own life doesn't make the book a history, or an autobiography, nor does it necessarily mean that any similarities that we may recognize are highly accurate representations of reality. However accurate they might seem, they have still been filtered through her own artistic process in setting the words down on the page.
So the short form is, that I much prefer close reading, and rereading, of the actual words on the page for obtaining an understanding of what story the author was trying to communicate by putting them there, before too quickly trying to elevate into seeing a purpose, message, theme, or borader interpretation for the story. For me, the latter excursions of the imagination are easier when I feel I finally have the interactions
within the underlying story well understood. And, for
To The Lighthouse, I am still working on them.
