
Selected author
Virginia Woolf
Virginia Woolf is a key figure in feminist literature, known for her creative storytelling and her strong support for women’s intellectual and creative freedom.
Woolf was an important member of the Bloomsbury Group and wrote novels, essays, and criticism that questioned common social and literary ideas. In her well-known essay A Room of One’s Own, she argues that women need financial independence and their own space to write, highlighting a key feminist call for freedom and opportunity. In books like Mrs. Dalloway, To the Lighthouse, and Orlando, Woolf focuses on women’s inner lives, using stream-of-consciousness and poetic language to show their hopes, doubts, and pushback against limiting social rules.
Woolf’s impact is more than just her unique writing style. Characters like Clarissa Dalloway, Lily Briscoe, and Orlando show the challenges of being a woman and finding one’s voice in a male-dominated world. By using new ways of telling stories, Woolf gave her characters deep psychological insight, helping readers see the world through their eyes. Her criticism of gender roles and her belief in women’s right to think and create freely have made her work important for many feminist writers and thinkers. Today, Woolf’s influence is still felt in literature and in ongoing discussions about gender, creativity, and equality.
A Writer's Diary
Woolf, Virginia
First American edition. Harcourt, Brace and Company, New York, 1953. Octavo. Binding firm and square. About near fine in a very good lightly age-toned dust jacket at spine and margins, with minor rubbing and small chips at extremities. Edited by Leonard Woolf. A clean, well-preserved copy.














Jacob's room
Woolf, Virginia
First Harvest/ HBJ edition, USA, 1978. In very good condition.







La viuda y el loro
Woolf, Virginia
Gadir Editorial, 2009. Título original: The Widow and the Parrot. Traducido por Catalina Martínez Muñoz. Ilustraciones de Concha F. Montesinos.









The Captain's Deathbed And Other Essays
Woolf, Virginia
Second impression. The Hogarth Press, London, 1981. Green binding clean and tight. Dust jacket every so slightly shelf worn.









The Common Reader
Woolf, Virginia
Vintage paperback. Harcourt, Brace and World, 1953. Some shelf wear visible on spine. Previous pricing sticker on front cover.



The Diary of Virginia Woolf Vol. I: 1915-1919
Woolf, Virginia
First edition. The Hogarth Press, London, 1977. Hardcover. Binding condition. Dust jacket bright, with some shelf wear. Tanning noticiable on the flaps. Introduced by Quentin Bell and edited by Anne Olivier Bell.









The Diary of Virginia Woolf Vol. II: 1920-1924
Woolf, Virginia
First edition. The Hogarth Press, London, 1978. Hardcover. Binding condition. Dust jacket has the slightest wear on bottom edge, and very light fading, but is otherwise lovely and bright. Edited by Anne Olivier Bell.









