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Include any comments here: "Spain is, by far, the most splendid country I have ever seen in my life ," said the British writer Virginia Woolf , who traveled through the country on three occasions and captured her impressions in diaries, letters and essays that have been collected by the publishing house Itineraria. in a book. "To the South. Travels through Spain by Virginia Woolf" is the title of this book that collects for the first time everything that this author, one of the most innovative writers of the th century and a fundamental figure of feminism, wrote about her stays in the peninsula. Virginia Woolf (London, -Sussex, ) traveled to Spain three times.
Her first was in , when she was only years old, in the company of her brother Adrian, after a serious depression that she suffered following the death of her father; In she returned to Spain on her honeymoon with Leonard Woolf, on a trip in which they also went to Italy; and C Level Executive List they returned in to the Alpujarras to visit her friend Gerald Brenan. The Itineraria publishing house, specialized in the publication of travel literature, explains that "Towards the South" is not a typical travel book since it is made up of extracts from letters, essays and diaries of the British writer compiled from different publications. and many of them unpublished in Spanish, but it does include places where he passed.
Places like Amonhon, which he seems to have confused and on which his essay "An Andalusian Inn" , published in The Guardian on July , , is based. And, after a search on maps of the railway networks of the time, everything would point, as explained in the book, to a district called Almorchón, belonging to the town of Cabeza del Buey, in Badajoz, since It has a railway station since the th century and a castle that match its itinerary and description: just a few kilometers apart, "An Andalusian inn" would actually be "An Extremaduran inn." A book illustrated by Carmen Bueno , which draws the places that the writer visited on her travels through Andalusia, and which has prologues by writers and researchers specialized in Woolf's work: Verónica Pachecho, Ángeles Mora and Anita Botwin.
VIP Membership Length (Optional): VIP Membership - 1 Year
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Include any comments here: "Spain is, by far, the most splendid country I have ever seen in my life ," said the British writer Virginia Woolf , who traveled through the country on three occasions and captured her impressions in diaries, letters and essays that have been collected by the publishing house Itineraria. in a book. "To the South. Travels through Spain by Virginia Woolf" is the title of this book that collects for the first time everything that this author, one of the most innovative writers of the th century and a fundamental figure of feminism, wrote about her stays in the peninsula. Virginia Woolf (London, -Sussex, ) traveled to Spain three times.
Her first was in , when she was only years old, in the company of her brother Adrian, after a serious depression that she suffered following the death of her father; In she returned to Spain on her honeymoon with Leonard Woolf, on a trip in which they also went to Italy; and C Level Executive List they returned in to the Alpujarras to visit her friend Gerald Brenan. The Itineraria publishing house, specialized in the publication of travel literature, explains that "Towards the South" is not a typical travel book since it is made up of extracts from letters, essays and diaries of the British writer compiled from different publications. and many of them unpublished in Spanish, but it does include places where he passed.
Places like Amonhon, which he seems to have confused and on which his essay "An Andalusian Inn" , published in The Guardian on July , , is based. And, after a search on maps of the railway networks of the time, everything would point, as explained in the book, to a district called Almorchón, belonging to the town of Cabeza del Buey, in Badajoz, since It has a railway station since the th century and a castle that match its itinerary and description: just a few kilometers apart, "An Andalusian inn" would actually be "An Extremaduran inn." A book illustrated by Carmen Bueno , which draws the places that the writer visited on her travels through Andalusia, and which has prologues by writers and researchers specialized in Woolf's work: Verónica Pachecho, Ángeles Mora and Anita Botwin.