Gina Wisker, while she introduces Virginia Woolf’s life and work to us, describes a writer of great sensitivity, who is able to express, from the deepest and most private place of her personality, the rhythm of life. Readers will discover how Virginia Woolf was able to break her time standards, since she was more interested in recreating life, in general, with her novels, rather than a specific plot that followed a traditional schema.
The text by G.W. bring the this author’s main works closer to us, it exhibits Virginia Woolf’s ideas about the topic of gender, the art of writing and the relationships that involve power, it deals with her side as an experimental writer and with the influence he had on literature, and tells us how her ideas opened up a window from which we could peer out and see other men and women’s lives.
Sylvia Plath brings life and work of one of the most brilliant and original minds in 20th century closer to us.
By focusing on Daddy, The Bell Jar and her Diaries, this book addresses the background, topics, pictures and techniques that unify them.
The text by Gina Wisker analyzes the plot, structure and characters; the main works by this remarkable writer; some critical approach about Sylvia Plath’s work, and her concern about issues such as identity and gender, together with her limitations.