VOLUME II

Critical Responses to Virginia Woolf's Essays;
Femininist Treatises and Biographies
Short Stories and Sketches
'Kew Gardens' (1919) 
40. KATHERINE MANSFIELD, 'Kew Gardens', Novels and Novelists, ed. John Middleton Murry, London, 1930: 
41. JOHN OAKLAND, 'Virginia Woolf's Kew Gardens', English Studies, 68, 3, June 1987 : 264-73, 

'Monday or Tuesday' (1921) 
42. SHULI BARZILAI, 'Virginia Woolf's Pursuit of Truth: "Monday or Tuesday", "Moments of Being" and "The Lady in the Looking-Glass, Journal of Narrative Technique, 18, Fall 1988: 199-210. 
43. SUSAN DICK, '" I Am Not Trying to Tell A Story": Three Short Fictions By Virginia Woolf' , English Studies in Canada, 15, 21 June 1989: 162-77.

 'Mr Bennett and Mrs Brown'(1924) 
44. FEIRON MORRIS, Review of 'Mr Bennett and Mrs Brown Criterion, 3, 9, January 1925: 326-9. 
45. SAMUEL HYNES, 'The Whole Contention Between Mr Bennett and Mrs Woolf', Novel, 1, Fall 1967: 34-44. 
46. BETH RIGEL DAUGHERTY, 'TheWhole Contention Between Mr Bennett and Mrs Woolf, Revisited', Virginia Woolf' CentennialEssays, ed. Elaine IC Ginsberg, et al, Troy; New York, 1983: 269-93. 

The Common Reader (1925) 
47. MATTHEWJOSEPHSON, 'Distinguished Essays', The Saturday Review of Literature, 4July 1925: 872. 
48. H.P. COLLINS, Review of The Common Reader, The Criterion, 3, July 1925: 586-8. 

The Common Reader: Second Series (1932) 
49. DILYS POWELL, 'Virginia Woolf', The Sunday Times, 16 October 1932: 12. 
50. DENYS THOMPSON, Review of The Common Reader: Second Series. Scrutiny, 13, Dec. 1932: 288-9. 
51. GERALD SYKES, 'Ex-Modernist', The Nation, 4 January 1933: 25.
 
Virginia Woof's Essays 
52. LOUlS KRONENBERGER, 'Virginia Woolf as Critic', The Nation, 17 October 1942: 382-5. 
53. MARK GOLDMAN, 'Virgnna Woolf and the Critic as Reader', PMLA, 80,June 1965: 275-84. 
54. MOHAMMED YASEEN, 'Virginia Woolf's Theory of Fiction', Aligarh Journal of English Studies, 7, 1982: 179-81. 
55. THOMAS M. MCLAUGHLIN, 'Virginia Woolf's Criticism: Interpretation as Theory and as Discourse', Southern Humanities Review, 17, 3, Summer 1983: 241-53. 

Feminist Treatises 
A Room of One's Own (1929) 
56. ARNOLD BENNETT, 'Queen of the High Brows Evening Standard, 28 November 1929: 5. 
57. ORLO WILLIAMS, Review of A Room of One's Own, The Criterion, 9, April 1930: 509-12.
58. M.E. KELSEY, 'Virginia Woolf and the She-Condition',Sewanee Review, 39, October-December 1931 : 425-44. 
59. REBECCA WEST, 'Autumn and Virginia Woolf', Ending in Earnest: A Literary Log, New York, 1931 : 208-13. 
60. WINIFRED HOLTBY, Two in a Taxi', Virginia Woolf London, 1932: Pennsylvania, 1969: 161-85. 
61. ELLEN HAWKES ROGAT, 'A Form of One's Own', Mosaic, 8, Fall 1974: 77-90. 
62. ALICE FOX, 'Literary Allusion as Feminist Criticism in A Room of One's Own', Philological Quarterly, 63, Spring 1984: 145-61. 
63. ANNABEL ROBINSON, 'Something Odd at Work: The Influence of Jane Harrison on A Room of One's Own', Wascana Review, 22, Spring 1987: 82-8. Revised for this edition, 1992. 
64. JANE MARCUS, 'Sapphistry: Narration as Lesbian Seduction in A Room of One's Own', Virginia Woolf and the Languages of Patriarchy, Bloomington, 1987: 163-87; 209-13; revised for this edition, 1992. 
65. JULIE ROBIN SOLOMON, 'Staking Ground: The Politics of Space in Virginia Woolf's A Room of One's Own and Three Guineas', Women 's Studies, 16, October 1989: 331-47; revised for this edition, 1992. 

Three Guineas (1938) 
66. GRAHAM GREENE, 'From the Mantlepiece', The Spectator 17 June 1938: 1110-12. 
67. AGNES ALLEN, 'Still a Man's World', The Saturday Review of Literature, 27 August 1938: 6. 
68. Q.D. LEAVIS, 'Caterpillars of the Commonwealth Unite!' Scrutiny, 7, September 1938: 203-14. 
69. NANCY BURR EVANS, 'The Political Consciousness of Virginia Woolf: A Room of One's Own and Three Guineas', The New Scholar, 4, Spring 1974: 167-80. 
70. NAOMI BLACK, 'Virginia Woolf: The Life of Natural Happiness. (1882-1941 ) ', Feminist Theorists: Three Centuries of Key Women Thinkers, ed. Dale Spender, New York, 1983: 296-313. 
71. SUSAN GROAG BELL, "'1 am an Outsider": The Politics of Virginia Woolf', Virginia Woolf Miscellany, 20, Spring 1983: 2-3 . 
72. QUENTIN BELL, 'Virginia Woolf, Her Politics', Virginia Woolf Miscellany, 20, Spring 1983: 2. 
73. GLYNIS CARR, 'Waging Peace: Virginia Woolf's Three Guineas', Proteus, 3, 2, Fall 1986 13-21 
74. BRENDA R. SILVER, 'The Authority ofAnger: Three Guineas as Case Study,' Signs, 16, 2, Winter 1991 340-70 

Biographies 
75. JOSEPHlNE O'BRIEN SCHAEFER, 'Moments of Vision in Virginia Woolf's Biographies', Virginia Woolf Quarterly, 2, 3-4, Summer/Fall 1976: 294-303. 
76. THOMAS S.W. LEWIS, 'Combining 'The advantages off act and fiction": Virginia Woolf's Biographies of Vita Sackville-West, Flush, and Roger Fry', Virginia Woolf' Centennial Essays, ed. Elaine K Ginsberg et al., New York, 1983: 296-324. 
77. ELIZABETH COOLEY, 'Revolutionizing Biography Orlando,Roger Fry, and the Tradition', South Atlantic Review, 55, 2, May 1990: 71-83. 

Orlando (1928) 
78. ANONYMOUS, Review, TLS, 11 October 1928 729 
79. HENRY SEIDEL CANBY, Orlando, a Biography', The Saturday Review of Literature, 3 November 1928: 313. 
80. ARNOLD BENNETT, 'Virginia Woolf's Orlando', Evening Standard, 8 November 1928: 5. 
81. DOROTHY BREWSTER, 'The Wild Goose', The Nation 28 November 1928: 577-8. 
82. FRANK BALDANZA, Orlando and the Sackvilles', PMLA, 70, March 1955: 274-9. 
83. CONSTANCE HUNTING, 'The Technique of Persuasion in Orlando', Modern Fiction Studies, 2, February 1956: 17-23. 
84. LEON EDEL, 'Time Literary Biography The Alexander Lectures 1955-6, London, 1957: 81-104, 109. 
85. MADELINE MOORE, ' Orlando An Imagnative Answer The Short Season Between Two Silences: The Mystical and the Political in the Novels of Virginia Woolf London, 1984: 93-115. 
86. SUSAN M. SQUIER, 'Tradition and Revision in Woolf's Orlando: Defoe and "The Jessamy Brides" ', Women's Studies, 12, 1986: 167-77. 
87. PAMELA L. CAUGHIE, 'Virginia Woolf's Double Discourse', Discontented Discourses: Feminism/Textual Intervention/ Psychoanalysis, eds Marleen S. Barr and Richard Feldstein, Urbana, 1989: 41-53. 

Flush 
88. DAVID GABLNETT, 'Flush', New Statesman and Nation, 7 October 1933: 416. 
89. EJ. SCOVELL, 'Lives of the Obscure', Time and Tide, 14 October 1933: 1234. 
90. MARK VAN DOREN, 'A Poetess's Dog', Nation, 137, 18 October 1933: 450. 
91. LOLA L. SZLADITS, "The Life, Character and Opinions of Flush the Spaniel," ' Bulletin of the New York Public Library 74, 4, April 1970: 211-18. 
92. CYNTHIA SALI-LING YU, 'The Fable of Flush', Virginia Woolf Miscellany, 3, Spring 1975: 7-8. 
93. PAMELA L. CAUGHIE, 'Flush and the Literary Canon: Oh where oh where has that little dog gone?' Tulsa Studies in Women 's Literature, 10. Spring 1991 : 47-66. 

Roger Fry (1940) 
94. HERBERT READ, Review of RogerFry, The Spectator, 165, 2 August 1940: 124. 
95. DESMOND MacCARTHY, Review of RogerFry, The Sunday Times, 4 August 1940: 4. 
96. PANTHEA REID BROUGHTON, "Virginia is Anal": Speculations on Virginia Woolf's Writing RogerFry and Reading Sigmund Freud', Journal of Modern Literature, 14, I, Summer 1987: 151-7. 
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