View Poll Results: To the Lighthouse verdict

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  • * A bookworm's nightmare!

    3 6.82%
  • ** Take a nap instead!

    3 6.82%
  • *** Finished but no reason to skip meals.

    5 11.36%
  • **** Don't forget to unplug the phone for this one!

    11 25.00%
  • ***** A bookworm's bibliophilic dream!

    22 50.00%
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Thread: To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf

  1. #1
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    To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf

    Virginia Woolf considered To the Lighthouse her masterpiece. This is quite easy to consider and ponder why. If we take note of her other novels To the Lighthouse hits closest to home partly because of its highly autobiographical nature. Unlike in Mrs. Dalloway where Woolf observes us earthlings with an icy coolness, in this novel we see her involvement and her strong attachments.

    Basically a novel about the pains and struggle of an English family before, during and after the First World War. To the Lighthouse is part reminiscence and the attempt to put into words the real "vision" and how this particular instance strikes our consciousness.

    The Ramsays is a large family of ten and as the book opens we see them - with some of their friends - spend a quiet time along the coast of Scotland . The youngest child, James, cuts away happily pictures from a shopping catalogue. He is happy because they're to visit a nearby lighthouse the next day. His mother assures him and prepares for the things to be brought. The father interrupts: the trip to the lighthouse is cancelled. A conflict arises lasting ten years before things are fairly settled. In these ten years many events will occur. The family will remain in London , the emergence of the First World War and several family members will die. The family returns thereafter and tries to amend bitterness and search for what one has lost.

    But what fascinates the reader is how Virginia Woolf managed to put this simple story altogether and express them by her own means, by her own "vision". The novel is told in three parts: The Window, Time Passes & The Lighthouse. The Window is set in an afternoon, the Ramsays languidly frolicking around their country house. At the end of that day Time Passes starts setting speed by rendering a quick recap on what happened ten years after. The third part The Lighthouse we see the Ramsays back in their country house, this time in the morning after 10 years of absence. By setting two days with ten years in between readers will be perplexed as virtually nothing happens in the story. This novel is not as simple as it seems for Woolf is more concerned with the little things that we take for granted. Small details dominate perpetually in this novel.

    To each his own, To the Lighthouse isn't for everybody, yet it deserves to be read and admired. What strikes me is the novel's sense of the individual, the inner self that talks its own language and its heartbreaking longing for the past.

  2. #2
    dum spiro, spero Nossa's Avatar
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    I've never gone pass the first half of the first part of this novel. I guess I'm not too fond of Woolf's way of writing, but I'll sure finish the book sometime.
    I'm the patron saint of the denial,
    With an angel face and a taste for suicidal.

  3. #3
    Alea iacta est. mortalterror's Avatar
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    I liked it, not as much as Mrs. Dalloway, but I liked it. Virginia Woolf's narrative style is excellent, although I think she worked a little harder than she had to on some tangential aspects. I had to study this book in a class, and the teacher kept going on and on about this recurring word, or that recurring image. I think that the book would have been fine without all of that.

  4. #4
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    I really loved the three of them. They were a totally new experience to me, reading them one after the other and in sequence.

  5. #5
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    I want to read Orlando again.

  6. #6
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    To the Lighthouse?

    Woolf portrays mercilessly the indeterminate and unfulfilled nature of the present, the here and now. Does going 'to the lighthouse' even matter? So true to life.

    The novel seemed much easier to read towards the end, but mostly a struggle.

  7. #7
    Registered User kelby_lake's Avatar
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    Couldn't really get into it.

  8. #8
    the beloved: Gladys's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by kelby_lake View Post
    Couldn't really get into it.
    I had reasons for persevering, but the first half was all uphill. Endless interior monologue in circles, and pronouns that sometimes referred the preceding noun.

    Still, true to life.

  9. #9
    Lost in the Fog PabloQ's Avatar
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    Crap, sounds like another one I need to add to the shelf. Good report, Sir Bart.
    No damn cat, no damn cradle - Newt Honniker

  10. #10
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    I have to admit that at first sight I wasn't too fond of To the Lighthouse but two years ago I used it as part of my thesis. I did a comparative study with Ian McEwan's Atonement. In his novel McEwan makes several allusions to Virginia Woolf, so I wanted to find out what his fascination with her was about.

    This way I was obliged to take a closer look at To the Lighthouse, focussing on stream-of-consciousness, use of time, intertextuality, language and structural experimentation. I have to say I really appriciated the novel more after that, probably because I had a much better understanding of its inner workings.

    For me, it also helped that I could link it with a more contemporary work. So maybe this can be a tip for those who read/ are planning to read To the Lighthouse: have a look at McEwan's Atonement.

  11. #11
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    It certainly wasn't my favorite book, but I did like it. Not as much as Mrs. Dalloway, The Waves, or Orlando, though.

    I thought Virginia Woolf always considered The Waves her masterpiece.

  12. #12
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    Quote Originally Posted by MissScarlett View Post
    ...I did like it. Not as much as Mrs. Dalloway, The Waves, or Orlando, though.
    How was 'To the Lighthouse' inferior?

  13. #13
    Registered User onioneater's Avatar
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    Without a doubt, THE worst "classic" novel I've ever read. Even worse than "The Bostonians" by Henry James, and that's saying a lot.

  14. #14
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    Quote Originally Posted by onioneater View Post
    Without a doubt, THE worst "classic" novel I've ever read. Even worse than "The Bostonians" by Henry James, and that's saying a lot.
    And I liked James's "Washington Square".

  15. #15
    Haribol Acharya blazeofglory's Avatar
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    The stream of consciousness is what reminds me of her novels. I like the story in the lighthouse and the rest.

    “Those who seek to satisfy the mind of man by hampering it with ceremonies and music and affecting charity and devotion have lost their original nature””

    “If water derives lucidity from stillness, how much more the faculties of the mind! The mind of the sage, being in repose, becomes the mirror of the universe, the speculum of all creation.

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