- A Haunted House and Other Short Stories
-
A Haunted House
1st edition coverAuthor(s) Virginia Woolf Cover artist Vanessa Bell Country United Kingdom Language English Genre(s) Short story Publisher Hogarth Press Publication date January 1944 Media type Print (Hardcover) Pages 124 pp ISBN NA A Haunted House is a 1944 collection of 18 short stories by Virginia Woolf. It was produced by her husband Leonard Woolf after her death although in the foreword he states that they had discussed its production together.[1]
- The first six stories appeared in her only previous collection Monday or Tuesday in 1921 :[2]
- "A Haunted House"
- "Monday or Tuesday"
- "An Unwritten Novel"
- "The String Quartet"
- "Kew Gardens"
- "The Mark on the Wall"
- The next six appeared appeared in magazines between 1922 and 1941 :
- "The New Dress"
- "The Shooting Party"
- "Lappin and Lappinova"
- "Solid Objects"
- "The Lady in the Looking-Glass"
- "The Duchess and the Jeweller"
- The final six were unpublished, although only "Moments of Being" and "The Searchlight" were finally revised by Virginia Woolf herself :
- "Moments of Being"
- "The Man who Loved his Kind"
- "The Searchlight"
- "The Legacy"
- "Together and Apart"
- "A Summing Up"
References
- ^ foreword by Leonard Woolf, 1st edition
- ^ http://www.bartleby.com/85/
External links
Works by Virginia Woolf Novels Short stories A Haunted House · A Society · Monday or Tuesday · An Unwritten Novel · The String Quartet · Blue & Green · Kew Gardens · The Mark on the Wall · The New Dress · The Duchess and the JewellerBiographies Flush: A Biography · Roger Fry: A BiographyNon-fiction Modern Fiction · The Common Reader · A Room of One's Own · On Being Ill · The London Scene · The Second Common Reader · Three Guineas · The Death of the Moth and Other Essays · The Moment and Other Essays · Women and WritingBibliography of Virginia Woolf This article about a collection of short stories is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. - The first six stories appeared in her only previous collection Monday or Tuesday in 1921 :[2]