Search
Log in
  • Home

  • Categories

  • Audiobooks

  • E-books

  • For kids

  • Top lists

  • Help

  • Download app

  • Use campaign code

  • Redeem gift card

  • Try free now
  • Log in
  • Language

    🇨🇭 Schweiz

    • DE
    • EN

    🇧🇪 Belgique

    • FR
    • EN

    🇩🇰 Danmark

    • DK
    • EN

    🇩🇪 Deutschland

    • DE
    • EN

    🇪🇸 España

    • ES
    • EN

    🇫🇷 France

    • FR
    • EN

    🇳🇱 Nederland

    • NL
    • EN

    🇳🇴 Norge

    • NO
    • EN

    🇦🇹 Österreich

    • AT
    • EN

    🇫🇮 Suomi

    • FI
    • EN

    🇸🇪 Sverige

    • SE
    • EN
  1. Books
  2. Classics and poetry
  3. Classics

Read and listen for free for 30 days!

Cancel anytime

Try free now
0.0(0)

To the Lighthouse

Set on an island off the Scottish coast, To the Lighthouse minutely examines the fleeting impressions of a large cast of family, friends, lovers, and hangers-on. Who can we be, Virginia Woolf invites us to ask, if no one can ever know our hearts - if they're unknowable even to ourselves? To the Lighthouse remains one of the most important Modernist novels, exquisitely composed by one of the most gifted writers of the Modernist movement.

The opening section follows the passage of a day with a thwarted objective: to go to the nearby lighthouse. The concluding section revisits this expedition a decade later, when so much is irrevocably changed, as a chance to glimpse interpersonal understandings and connections. The novel provides a brilliant example of stream-of-consciousness writing, and raises questions that provoke us still: questions about whether children are the fullest realization of one's posterity, how women artists are regarded socially, and how money and status enable - or close off - networks, relationships, and the dreams we hold most dear.

As masterful as its technique is, however, the lasting value of this novel for twenty-first-century readers may be its sharp representation of the emotional labor that people - particularly women - perform in order to manage the needs and expectations of others. Woolf wrote in an age when women's participation in society was tightly restricted by class norms and stultifying domesticity. Nearly a century later, scholars still have a great deal to say about Mrs. Ramsay, Lily Briscoe, and the tension between Mr. Ramsay and his son James.

Woolf's fifth novel, and one of her most successful books both critically and commercially, To the Lighthouse was originally published in 1927, simultaneously in England and the United States. Due to a quirk in the management and correction of the proofs, according to scholar Hans Walter Gabler, the two editions were "not identical, since in a significant number of instances Virginia Woolf marked up the first proofs differently" for her two publishers.


Author:

  • Virginia Woolf

Narrator:

  • Phil Benson

Format:

  • Audiobook
  • E-book

Duration:

  • 7 h 58 min
  • 159 pages

Language:

English

Categories:

  • Classics and poetry
  • Classics

More by Virginia Woolf

Skip the list
  1. Die größten Heldinnen der Literatur (50 Romane in einem Band)

    Charlotte Brontë, Jane Austen, Louisa May Alcott, Leo Tolstoi, Virginia Woolf, Thomas Hardy, Sinclair Lewis, Hedwig Dohm, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Elizabeth Burgoyne Corbett, Daniel Defoe, Anne Brontë, L. M. Montgomery, Victor Hugo, Wilhelmine von Hillern, Adalbert Stifter, Luise Ahlborn, George Eliot, Lou Andreas-Salomé, Stefan Zweig, D. H. Lawrence, Henry James, Margaret Mitchell, Edith Wharton, Miles Franklin, Willa Cather, Elizabeth Gaskell, Nikolai Semjonowitsch Leskow, Theodore Dreiser, Elizabeth von Arnim, Colette, Honoré de Balzac, William Makepeace Thackeray, Gustave Flaubert, Emile Zola, Theodor Fontane, Ada Langworthy Collier, Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu, Johanna Schopenhauer, Nathaniel Hawthorne, Charles Dickens

    book
  2. A Room of One's Own

    Virginia Woolf

    audiobookbook
  3. Mrs. Dalloway : Un día en la vida de una mujer y sus pensamientos más íntimos. Nueva Traducción

    Virginia Woolf

    book
  4. Mrs Dalloway in Bond Street

    Virginia Woolf

    book
  5. Mrs. Dalloway

    Virginia Woolf

    audiobookbook
  6. Mrs Dalloway

    Virginia Woolf

    audiobookbook
  7. Mrs. Dalloway - Unabridged

    Virginia Woolf

    audiobook
  8. Mrs Dalloway på Bond Street

    Virginia Woolf

    audiobookbook
  9. Mrs Dalloway

    Virginia Woolf

    audiobookbook
  10. Mrs Dalloway

    Virginia Woolf

    audiobookbook
  11. Mrs Dalloway

    Virginia Woolf

    audiobookbook
  12. Mrs Dalloway

    Virginia Woolf

    book

  • 712 books

    Virginia Woolf

    Virginia Woolf was an English novelist, essayist, short story writer, publisher, critic and member of the Bloomsbury group, as well as being regarded as both a hugely significant modernist and feminist figure. Her most famous works include Mrs Dalloway, To the Lighthouse and A Room of One’s Own.

    Read more

Help and contact


About us

  • Our story
  • Career
  • Press
  • Accessibility
  • Partner with us
  • Investor relations
  • Instagram
  • Facebook

Explore

  • Categories
  • Audiobooks
  • E-books
  • Magazines
  • For kids
  • Top lists

Popular categories

  • Crime
  • Biographies and reportage
  • Fiction
  • Feel-good and romance
  • Personal development
  • Children's books
  • True stories
  • Sleep and relaxation

Nextory

Copyright © 2025 Nextory AB

Privacy Policy · Terms · Imprint ·
Excellent4.3 out of 5