Published in 1922, the same year as Ulysses and The Waste Land, Jacob's Room is Virginia Woolf's own modernist manifesto. Ostensibly a study of a young man's life on the eve of the Great War, it is really a bomb thrown into the world of the conventional novel, as she attempts to capture the richness and randomness of life's encounters. Jacob Flanders is a mere point of contact between a crowd of people, appearing and disappearing in a tableau in which all is flux, without certainty and without a controlling viewpoint. But it seems that the author could not maintain this rigorous impersonality, and the radical technique breaks down, so that we finally see Jacob as a person, just as his world is blown apart.
- Available now
- New eBook additions
- Most popular
- Try something different
- Test Prep eBooks
- Cookbooks Galore!
- In Another Era: Top Historical Fiction
- Up Close and Personal - Biographies & Autobiographies
- New kids additions
- New teen additions
- See all ebooks collections
- Available now
- New audiobook additions
- Most popular
- Try something different
- The Great Courses
- Top Thrillers
- New kids additions
- New teen additions
- See all audiobooks collections
- Spanish Titles
- Para Adolescentes
- Chinese Titles
- Japanese Titles
- French Titles
- Livres en français
- See all language collections collections
