Letters, 1939 : to Ronald Heffer.

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Letters, 1939 : to Ronald Heffer.

One typescript letter signed by Virginia Woolf from Monk's House, dated December 17th, 1939, and one manuscript postcard written on Leonard Woolf's stationery, also signed by Virginia Woolf. In the letter Virginia Woolf replies to a question proposed by Heffer regarding the usefulness of propaganda and empathizes with his life in camp. She offers to send him a copy of Leonard Woolf's recently published Barbarians at the Gate and any of her own works. Virginia Woolf writes in her postcard, which most likely accompanied the books mentioned in the previous letter, that she cannot publish Heffer's poems and suggests that he try the Daily Telegraph.

2 items.

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Woolf, Virginia, 1882-1941

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6qg9gvk (person)

Virginia Woolf (b. January 25, 1882, London, England–d. March 28, 1941, Ouse, River, Englnad) was a noted novelist and is now viewed as a pioneer of feminist literature. She was a member of the Bloomsbury Group, comprised of English artists, philosophers, and writers in the early twentieth century. She was also a co-founder and operator (along with husband Leonard Woolf) of Hogarth Press. Though she received little formal education, her father, a writer and editor with strong ...

Heffer, Ronald.

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Bloomsbury Authors.

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