Lucio P. Ruotolo is Professor of English at Stanford University, and the author of Six Existential Heroes: The Politics of Faith and the editor of Virginia Woolf's Freshwater: A Play.

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Description
1. Introduction; 2. Being chaotic: The Voyage Out; 3. Breaking with convention: Night and Day; 4. On the margins of consciousness: Jacob's Room; 5. The unguarded moment: Mrs. Dalloway; 6. A void at the center: To the Lighthouse; 7. In praise of nothingness: The Waves; 8. Toward mutuality: The Years; 9. The tyranny of leadership: Between the Acts; 10. Conclusion; Notes; Index.
'This important pioneering study of eight of Woolf's novel derives from a sense of her 'rhythm of broken sequence': her characters who are open to interruption are also open to the 'aesthetic of disjunction situated at the heart of human interplay', while those not so open succumb to 'self-supporting insularity'. Sensitively tying in biography with analysis, Ruotolo sheds considerable light on the novels (The Voyage Out, Night and Day, Jacob's Room, Mrs. Dalloway, To the Lighthouse, The Waves, The Years, and Between the Acts) ... Ruotolo reads Woolf closely, carefully, and astutely, and his analysis necessarily affects all subsequent work on Woolf; he writes clearly and persuasively, and he offers substantial support for his conclusions from Woolf's diaries and letters.' P. Schlueter, Choice
