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Orlando

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Virginia Woolf's Orlando 'The longest and most charming love letter in literature', playfully constructs the figure of Orlando as the fictional embodiment of Woolf's close friend and lover, Vita Sackville-West. Spanning three centuries, the novel opens as Orlando, a young nobleman in Elizabeth's England, awaits a visit from the Queen and traces his experience with first love as England under James I lies locked in the embrace of the Great Frost. At the midpoint of the novel, Orlando, now an ambassador in Constantinople, awakes to find that he is now a woman, and the novel indulges in farce and irony to consider the roles of women in the 18th and 19th centuries. As the novel ends in 1928, a year consonant with full suffrage for women. Orlando, now a wife and mother, stands poised at the brink of a future that holds new hope and promise for women.

336 pages, Paperback

First published October 11, 1928

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About the author

Virginia Woolf

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(Adeline) Virginia Woolf was an English novelist and essayist regarded as one of the foremost modernist literary figures of the twentieth century.

During the interwar period, Woolf was a significant figure in London literary society and a member of the Bloomsbury Group. Her most famous works include the novels Mrs. Dalloway (1925), To the Lighthouse (1927), and Orlando (1928), and the book-length essay A Room of One's Own (1929) with its famous dictum, "a woman must have money and a room of her own if she is to write fiction."

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Profile Image for Kelly.
894 reviews4,763 followers
September 10, 2016
My mom made me clean my room this weekend. No, not a teenage pain-in-the-ass cleaning of the room, this was THE cleaning of the room. As in, it was finally time to take apart the room I鈥檇 had in that house since we moved there somewhere around my thirteenth birthday.

Look you guys, I get it. I鈥檓 twenty-four. That鈥檚 another one of those Facts of Life that just happens to you, and most people would say I was far past time for this. And you know what? I was doing okay with it. It went slowly, but it wasn鈥檛 as bad as I had thought it would be- I went through old clothes, trophies from various sporting events (yeah, I spent sometime laughing about the fact that I used to do sports, too), old pictures of friends and even boyfriends, and the major breakdown I was waiting for happily stayed away. Yessir, I was a-okay.

Then I got to The Wall. It was the last thing to be done, and I just couldn鈥檛 bring myself to do more than look at it and then utterly lose my shit. Why that, when nothing else managed to get to me? Well, here鈥檚 why: I started building that wall when I was thirteen years old. It鈥檚 full of every person I was, thought I was, or hoped that I would become. It started on the back of the door which was plastered all over with quotes in ridiculous fonts from my favorite books (I can tell you the exactly the path I followed putting things up on that door by where the quotes are from) and three pages of plastered quotes describing my personality at sixteen that a friend gave me for Christmas. There鈥檚 the label from my junior year birthday present from my friends that says 鈥淭he flamboyant actress鈥� box of stuff,鈥� which is right next to two posters of illustrated Shakespearean quotes I got in Stratford and over Glinda the Good Witch sitting on top of the lightswitch saying, 鈥淵ou鈥檝e always had the power to go back to Kansas鈥� (I didn鈥檛 put that there, and to this day I have no idea who did). This gives way to black and white posters showing scenes of Paris, cutouts from about a bazillion travel magazines, pictures I took in Ireland and England (including a prominently placed one on top of Glastonbury Tor), a speculative geneology chart out of the Arthurian legends, a painting by Magritte, a huge section of black and white glamour shots of old Hollywood stars (Grace Kelly, Elizabeth Taylor, Errol Flynn, a photo of Bogey looking down a totally unaware Marilyn Monroe鈥檚 dress, a drunk Orson Welles bombasting to Tony Curtis), my headshots and professional photos from the various productions I was in, cast photos, and a picture of the voice teacher who was my second mother for many years.

In other words, it鈥檚 the most fucking ridiculous part of the room! You鈥檇 think I鈥檇 be glad to get rid of the the embarrassing evidence of my bad taste, failed dreams, and terrible role models. And yet, that part was the only thing I gave a shit about. I really felt like crap about it, until I read Orlando and saw this:

鈥淔or she had a great variety of selves to call upon, far more than we have been able to find room for, since a biography is considered complete if it merely accounts for six or seven selves, whereas a person may have many thousand鈥nd these selves of which we are built up, one on top of the other, as plates are piled on a waiter鈥檚 hand, have attachments elsewhere, sympathies, little constitutions and rights of their own鈥� so that one will only come if it is raining, another in a room with green cutrains, another when Mrs. Jones is not there鈥� and some are too wildly ridiculous to be mentioned in print at all.鈥�

and this:

鈥渘ature鈥as further complicated her task and added to our confusion by providing a perfect rag-bag of odds and ends within us-a piece of a policeman鈥檚 trousers lying cheek by jowl with Queen Alexandra鈥檚 wedding veil鈥�.Instead of being a single, downright, bluff piece of work of which no man need feel ashamed, our commonest deeds are set about with a fluttering and flickering of wings, a rising and falling of lights.鈥�

I wrote in an earlier Vita review about my envy of coherence and life stories that make sense, and how frustrated I was that I couldn鈥檛 make my own follow a similar pattern. Woolf understands this frustration (鈥渁 single downright piece of work of which no man need feel ashamed鈥�), and tells me why it isn鈥檛 ever going to happen- the thousands of selves, and Queen Alexandra鈥檚 wedding veil and the policeman鈥檚 trousers- what sort of goddess thinks of that?- and then, gift of all gifts, she seems both to understand it and even sympathize with it (in her way)! And this isn鈥檛 some poet off the street we鈥檙e talking about, this is Virginia Woolf! She鈥檚 okay with inconsistencies? Someone that smart is fascinated with absurdities, flights of fancy, illogical trains of thought, even slowness in someone that she loves this deeply? She鈥檚 willing to write 300 pages celebrating it, even?

Screw bodice rippers, that thought is the best porn that literary devising could give me. She gave me back Glinda and Bogey, and made me feel proud to take them. Orlando is many things, but it is above all a story that tries to make a dozen fantasies seem possible, or even the inevitable result of a life that is lived with all those thousand selves really getting in their say. While Woolf鈥檚 tone in this book is often light, mocking, wry, or even cutting, I don鈥檛 think that this detracted from the sublime quality of the story that she鈥檚 telling. If anything, her wry asides made the telling of Orlando that much more meaningful. By engaging with prosaic reality every so often- reminding us about the Nick Greenes of the world, the merchants, the couples walking two by Victorian two- she shows us why Orlando should be celebrated, if only for making it through the day, never mind the years on top of years, intact. There鈥檚 nobody like Virginia Woolf for getting the most out of the heroic efforts of every last moment, and just why it tortures us so much: 鈥淭he present participle is the Devil,鈥� she says here, and speaks lovingly of the past and future that shield us from the terrifying fact that we are here and now and we鈥檙e supposed to be someone doing something.

Time is the enabler of the novel, the vehicle through which all this exploration takes place, the administrative assistant that dispenses elfish magic when needed and sends out stern reminders of the rules when they are being ignored, but it鈥檚 one of Time鈥檚 children that鈥檚 both the demon and the anti-hero of the whole thing: Memory. Memory is the both the cocoon that protects Orlando from the ravages of 鈥榞rowing up鈥� too much, and the beast that tries to tear her fragile defenses into shreds the second he isn鈥檛 looking (don鈥檛 get me for pronoun confusion, I know what I did there). It鈥檚 a dangerous drug to pull out regularly. Because no, actually, you can鈥檛 stop whenever you want to:

鈥溾€� it has contrived that the whole assortment shall be stitched together by a single thread. Memory is the seamstress, and a capricious one at that. Memory runs her needle in and out, up and down, hither and thither. We know not what comes next, or what follows after. Thus the most ordinary movment in the world, such as sitting down at a table and pulling the inkstand towards one, may agitate a thousand odd, disconnected fragments, now bright, now dim, hanging and bobbing and dipping and flaunting, like the underlinen of a family of fourteen on a line in a gale of wind鈥︹€�

And no, there鈥檚 no way of safely taking it, either:

鈥淓very single thing, once he tried to dislodge it from its place in his mind, he found thus cumbered with other matter like the lump of glass which, after a year at the bottom of the sea, is grown about with bones and dragon-flies and coins and the tresses of drowned women.鈥�

There was a period in my life after a particularly traumatic experience that I would stop in the street sometimes, muttering, 鈥淪hut up, shut up, shut up!鈥� My terrible therapist called me 鈥渨eird鈥�, my mother decided I was talking to her, my friends made a nervous joke out of it. But Woolf understands the freakish intersection of memory and the present moment your body is in. It鈥檚 guerilla warfare out there- the even scarier modern kind where there are even less decent barriers as to when and where it is okay for the enemy to try and fuck you up. It鈥檚 not just running into an old friend, hearing a song with certain associations that鈥檒l do it. And don鈥檛 think you can go searching the banks for something useful to you without paying compounded interest- there鈥檚 no such thing as a free lunch, especially not in the Memory banks. One memory is part of another memory, and unless you are far better at compartmentalizing than me, even reaching for a good memory is going to involve pushing through the muck to get to it.

It鈥檚 sad to think that Woolf probably understood this due to her own troubles with the state of her sanity. She uses words like 鈥渁ssault,鈥� when talking about time, imagery of rushing waves when showing 翱谤濒补苍诲辞鈥檚 memories intruding upon her again and again- you don鈥檛 do that unless you know what the hell you鈥檙e talking about. I can see why she went on to write a book called The Waves right after this.

It鈥檚 actually a pretty funny book, though. I feel like I鈥檓 giving you the wrong idea of it. It鈥檚 lighthearted most of the time, there are excellent jokes in the style of Wodehouse in an archly amused tone that I just loved. It comments on gender, women in society, the industry of writing, writers themselves, historians, the Victorian age, Romantic sensibilities, and does it in a style that鈥檚 the most accessible I鈥檝e ever seen her write. She openly invites you to be in on the joke and comment all you like as the Vanity Fair passes you by. I felt quite worldly observing things from her perch. It feels like her contribution to all the genres of literature that happened to be popular at the time- making use of all of them, getting trapped by the conventions of none. Parts of it just happened to give me some words I鈥檝e been desperately searching for, so I did the fall on my knees and worship thing instead of attending the tea party afterwards. But don鈥檛 worry, she still found time to help Bertie Wooster out of his latest engagement.
Profile Image for Lisa.
1,102 reviews3,298 followers
February 24, 2020
"I'm sick to death of this particular self. I want another."

Orlando to me is a dream come true in literature. Being able to move in time and space and to change my gender with my moods is a deeply satisfying idea. It is the quintessence of what reading means in my life - the opportunity to leave my own life behind and step into the body and soul of other people, only to move on again when I feel like it. I can be intensely engaged for a week, and then put the adventure safely into my memory and try something different.

Orlando is a hymn to reading and imagination and love. It is a break from conventions, and a story heavy as a heart and light as a feather.

Love it!
Profile Image for s.penkevich.
1,522 reviews13k followers
April 28, 2025
鈥�I contain multitudes,鈥� wrote the poet , a nod to the contradictions and selves that bud and grow from the branches of the self as we 鈥�proceed to fill my next fold of the future.鈥� It is a fluidity of life and personhood which Virginia Woolf observes as 鈥�these selves of which we are built up, one on top of another, as plates are piled on a waiter鈥檚 hand鈥� as she crafts the long shifting arc of personalities and gender in the titular character of study in her 1928 novel Orlando: A Biography. Orlando, who starts the novel denoted as a 鈥�He鈥攆or there could be no doubt of his sex, though the fashion of the time did something to disguise it鈥� in a gorgeously poetic reimagining of the Elizabethan age, to later awaken 鈥榮he鈥� in a life that stretches into the 1920s. As accomplished a novel as Woolf ever wrote, the density of its vibrant prose delivered through a playful tension of biographical writing with stream-of-consciousness is held aloft by a witty humor while soaring on wings of obvious joy and love for both her craft and the novel鈥檚 inspiration, , to whom the book is dedicated. It is a sharp criticism of society, particularly the restrictions of women under obdurate patriarchal norms which 翱谤濒补苍诲辞鈥檚 transition into womanhood holds up in stark contrast to their life as a free-spirited young man. Transcending the binary of gender and interrogating the fluidity of self, time and biography that flourishes once we crack the crust of their socially imposed constructs, Orlando: A Biography is a poetic portrait of perfection and philosophical insights that bore itself deep into my heart for a reading experience of pure bliss.

鈥�Instead of being a single, downright, bluff piece of work of which no man need feel ashamed, our commonest deeds are set about with a fluttering and flickering of wings, a rising and falling of lights.鈥�

Having long loved the works of Virginia Woolf鈥擨 have her face tattooed on the inside of my left arm鈥擨 was thrilled to finally read a book that was not only dear to the writer but also a formative novel for many of my other favorite authors. Most notably who provides the introduction to the most recent edition (a variation of the introduction can be read ). It has now, too, become one of my favorites. Winterson discusses Orlando as not necessarily the first trans novel鈥�, for instance, has the story of 鈥攂ut an early one that was already far ahead of its time in sexual and gender politics. And one that has lasted a century, published at a time when censoring novels over sexuality wasn鈥檛 unheard but, as Winterson explains, 鈥�Woolf, because she can write, smuggled past the censors and the 鈥媑uardians of propriety the most outrageous contraband.鈥�

This is a historical novel in many ways, one Woolf adopted a prose style reflecting that of the Elizabethan age for the start of her book, though it is also highly steeped in Woolf鈥檚 own personal history. While homosexuality between men, there was never though it was highly frowned upon. It was under this social culture that Virginia Woolf was famously involved with Vita Sackville-West who is a major inspiration for the character Orlando (the title character name, however, is likely derived from 鈥檚 where Rosalind, disguised as Ganymede, teaches Orlando how to love). For starters, Orlando realizes after becoming a woman that the pleasures of life are suddenly gatekept, such as being unable to own property or having any social mobility without a husband, a harsh reality Woolf had to face knowing that being without a husband and in a relationship with another woman would be a near social impossibility. Woolf, similarly, addresses these issues in , though the groundworks of thought are already present in Orlando, and is the sort social barriers decries in writing:
鈥�Woman is shut up in a kitchen or in a boudoir, and astonishment is expressed that her horizon is limited. Her wings are clipped, and it is found deplorable that she cannot fly.鈥�

I was reminded of how, in 鈥檚 Giovanni鈥檚 Room, we see the character Hella criticize the 鈥�humiliating necessity鈥� that women are disregarded unless she is attached to a man, to 鈥�be at the mercy of some gross, unshaven stranger before you can begin to be yourself,鈥� which Orlando now must experience. Sackville-West, for instance, was unable to inherit her , and so Woolf begins 翱谤濒补苍诲辞鈥檚 journey growing up in the very home at Knole. We also see Sackville-West鈥檚 inspiration in Orlando knowing that she would in order to escort her lover, Violet, around Paris.

Woolf (left) with Sackville-West (right)

鈥�Different sex. Same person.鈥�

Along with the various avenues of society now closed as a woman, Orlando observes variations of judgment as well. For instance, as a boy, sleeping around was acceptable but as a woman it would be outrageously scandalous, a man writing poetry is one thing but a woman writing is another, such is the meaning behind what Woolf in , 鈥�I would venture to guess that Anon, who wrote so many poems without signing them, was often a woman,鈥� and the obstacles she faces in her own life. 鈥�Love, the poet said, is woman's whole existence,鈥� Woolf writes about, 鈥�as long as she thinks of a man, nobody objects to a woman thinking鈥� and Orlando feels closed in this society where, as Beauvoir writes 鈥�marriage is the destiny traditionally offered to women by society鈥� with little else. Suddenly Orlando sees that women are thought to exist as accessories for me, or, as Woolf writes in Room:
鈥�Women have served all these centuries as looking glasses possessing the magic and delicious power of reflecting the figure of man at twice its natural size.鈥�

This is the issue with gender roles as we are shown here, something Orlando aims to be free of through her fluidity and seeing them as falsehood. addresses this in her book asserting that gender is performative, formed through repetition plus performance but not synonymous with it. Performative, by means of saying 鈥�that it is real only to the extent that it is performed鈥� and thereby not binarily fixed, but also gender roles are largely culturally influenced rather than biologically and tend to be construct labels assigned to maintain a hierarchical society. Such a society, Woolf and Beauvoir would argue, is orchestrated toward maintaining dominance for men at the cost of women鈥檚 social and financial agency. But through moving between genders, Orlando shows a freedom from it, such as Sackville-West did in dressing as a man. 鈥�Vain trifles as they seem, clothes have, they say, more important offices than to merely keep us warm,鈥� Woolf writes, 鈥�they change our view of the world and the world's view of us.鈥� So what does the change of social attitudes in a change of outward appearance say about the internal self?

鈥�I'm sick to death of this particular self. I want another.鈥�

While thinking of the use of clothes as a symbol here, I realized how reading Orlando became a full literary event for me as I began to see the influence of it in many novels I鈥檝e loved and how it is such a touchstone for Winterson鈥檚 early works. When Orlando meets Sasha with the entourage of the Russian embassy at the Frost Fair, Orlando is first unsure if she is a man based on her dress, a scene that Winterson would reimagine as one of my favorite moments in all of literature in The Passion when Villanelle first kisses and falls for her lover during the festivities of the Venice casino while dressed as a man. The implication that Villanelle feels most assured sexually when in the role of a man, reflected in her choice of outfit but still undeniably the same self鈥� 鈥�was this breeches and boots self any less real than my garters?鈥欌€攊s a predominant theme in Orlando鈥�. Clothes are shown by Woolf as a symbol of the construct of gender, representing it as a sort of exterior performance:
鈥�Clothes are but a symbol of something hidden deep beneath鈥ften it is only the clothes that keep the male or female likeness, while underneath the sex is the very opposite of what it is above.鈥�

Orlando observes how women are highly scrutinized and judged over their dress, with the frivolity of clothes assumed to fill their lives in place of all the society denied to women. But the performance of clothes are also a way to code switch, something we see Winterson similarly adopt in Sexing the Cherry where, when around women, protagonist Jordan reflects that 鈥�in my petticoats I was a traveler in a foreign country鈥 was regarded with suspicion.鈥� and therefore chooses to wear women鈥檚 clothes and pass himself as a woman. It is a reversal of expectations as we tend to encounter stories in which a woman dresses as a man to liberate their social movements and gain access to patriarchal privileges. Woolf shows clothes as a sort of gender hierarchical uniform, something Orland notices prominently:
鈥�it was not until she felt the coil of skirts about her legs and the captain offered, with the greatest politeness, to have an awning spread for her on deck that she realized, with a start the penalties and the privileges of her position鈥�

However, these are all constructs Woolf sees as false barriers. 鈥�At one and the same time, therefore, society is everything and society is nothing. Society is the most powerful concoction in the world and society has no existence whatsoever.鈥� A powerful statement indeed.

鈥�The flower bloomed and faded. The sun rose and sank. The lover loved and went. And what the poets said in rhyme, the young translated into practice.鈥�

Fluidity is inherent in this entire novel, even the idea of linear time. I鈥檝e long believed that, when we move into a meaningful part of life, when something feels it is being written into the book of the self, our perception of time slows down. When once months could pass like weeks, suddenly a week feels like a month as it slows to let the nuance breathe. The way encountering love will expand the calendar of your days which stretch out like a narrative arc, slow the season and let the summer sunlight in. Woolf commonly plays with this idea of the 鈥�extraordinary discrepancy between time on the clock and time in the mind鈥� which she refers to in Orlando as 鈥�the shock of time.鈥�
鈥�For what more terrifying revelation can there be that it is the present moment? That we survive the shock at all is only possible because the past shelters us on one side, the future on another. But we have no time now for reflections; Orlando was terribly late already.鈥�

We see time represented by 翱谤濒补苍诲辞鈥檚 poem, 鈥淥ak Tree鈥�, the only poem not immolated in response to insult to his play from Nicholas Greene, due to it being 鈥�his boyish dream and very short.鈥� It is with Orlando their whole life, changing with them. Time has a sense of fluidity though, with Orlando able to understand a sense of continuity between the many selves across their lengthy lifetime, yet the jumble of memories which arise through the timeline into a series of loops and disorder. In a life of many selves, memory plays timekeeper but also opens up portals unstuck from time.
鈥�Memory is the seamstress, and a capricious one at that. Memory runs her needle in and out, up and down, hither and thither. We know not what comes next, or what follows after. Thus the most ordinary movement in the world, such as sitting down at a table and pulling the inkstand towards one, may agitate a thousand odd, disconnected fragments, now bright, now dim, hanging and bobbing and dipping and flaunting, like the underlinen of a family of fourteen on a line in a gale of wind鈥�鈥�

It is only through narrative in retrospect that we are able to view time and person as a linear progress.

鈥�The true length of a person鈥檚 life, whatever the Dictionary of National Biography may say, is always a matter of dispute.鈥�

In this sense we must consider the novel鈥檚 aim as a 鈥渂iography.鈥� In a sense, it is a mock biography mocking the concept of biography. The book, however, blends the 鈥渞eal鈥� with moments of magical realism in an attempt to show how, through metaphor, we can often get a better sense of the lived experience of 鈥渞eality鈥� than through cold facts. It is also a jab at her own father who wrote for the Dictionary of National Biography, and the sense that confining a life to dates and facts does little to allow the magic of existence to be felt. That there is truth in subjectivity, in the blend of 鈥�rainbow and granite,鈥� that the poets can find as valuable of meaning in life as the biographers, that there is more to a map of life than the boundaries.

鈥�some we know to be dead even though they walk among us; some are not yet born though they go through all the forms of life; other are hundreds of years old though they call themselves thirty-six.鈥�

In short, Orlando is a brilliant book. Perhaps a bit dense, Woolf employs an achingly lovely prose that lulls you in and engulfs you with its beauty. It is quite ahead of its time, addressing concepts such as 鈥�what is called, rightly or wrongly, a single self, a real self鈥� in terms of gender roles while also cracking through the illusions of social constructs to let the fluidity of life flow free. A marvelous read from an extraordinary writer.

5/5

鈥�By the truth we are undone. Life is a dream. 'Tis the waking that kills us. He who robs us of our dreams robs us of our life.鈥�
Profile Image for Sean Barrs .
1,122 reviews47.4k followers
December 4, 2017
Woolf did not write this book for her readers; she specifically wrote it for her close 鈥渇riend鈥� and fellow writer Vita Sackville-West. As such Woolf does things she would not normally do in her writing; it is not at all serious but instead takes on the form of a literary homage, homage to reading and writing. My case in point:

鈥淔or it would seem - her case proved it - that we write, not with the fingers, but with the whole person. The nerve which controls the pen winds itself about every fibre of our being, threads the heart, pierces the liver.鈥�

鈥淭he taste for books was an early one. As a child he was sometimes found at midnight by a page still reading. They took his taper away, and he bred glow-worms to serve his purpose. They took the glow-worms away and he almost burnt the house down with a tinder.鈥�


description
-Tilda Swinton as Orlando in the 1992 film adaptation

More significantly, it was also homage to someone she loved quite dearly. I do wonder if originally she intended for this to be published; it is clearly a piece of writing that is very personal and addressed to one person. There are just so many emotions in this novel. The story begins with Orlando, a young man living in the Elizabethan age who is about to be transformed. The story also ends with Orlando, a woman writer living in the 20th century. The entire novel is a fictionalised history of Vita Sackville-West, of an imagined past life she lived under the guise of Orlando several centuries before she met Woolf.

Orlando had his heart broken at a very young age; it is shattered beyond repair as he is abandoned and left in ruins. Life must go on. He finds solace in reading and writing, tools he uses to escape from the horrors of reality. He begins with poetry; thus, finding an appropriate channel for his self-pity and woe begotten thoughts. He strives for fame, for literary acknowledgment, by perfecting his craft. If he fails, if the idealised writer fails, the thoughts of suicide and inferiority begin to dog his steps. I need not mention how Woolf met her own end, but this read like an early foreshadowing. It was haunting.

鈥淏y the truth we are undone. Life is a dream. 'Tis the waking that kills us. He who robs us of our dreams robs us of our life.鈥�

And as such he attempts to push forward. Indeed, that much so he goes into womanhood. On a plot level it didn鈥檛 really make sense; it just kind of happened, though it did give Woolf a perfect opportunity to critique the nuances of gender roles within society. And it was described so beautifully. I can鈥檛 fault her for it. I can鈥檛 really fault the novel, only to say it lost a considerable amount of passion, energy and momentum once Orlando had changed his sex.

description

This is the weirdest, most imaginative, novel I鈥檝e read in months. Despite the bizarreness of the plot, the wackiest thing about it is the fact that Virginia Woolf wrote it. I hated Mrs Dalloway. I count it among my least favourite novels in existence. I hate the way Woolf wrote it, why she wrote it and the literary style she tried to produce. Orlando made me rethink my opinion of Woolf entirely. I鈥檝e read a lot of her non-fictional essays along with her literary criticisms of other 20th century writers. This, oddly, goes against much of what she advocated. She was a staunch supporter of realism within her writing, that much so she took efforts to make her plots less constructed so they mirrored real life: this is something else entirely.

So I鈥檝e come to the conclusion that I didn鈥檛 really understand Woolf (perhaps I still don鈥檛.) The pathway forward remains an obvious one: I simply must read everything she ever wrote in order to understand her better. Time to get busy.
Profile Image for Ahmad Sharabiani.
9,562 reviews761 followers
September 7, 2021
(Book 675 From 1001 Books) - Orlando = Orlando: A Biography, Virginia Woolf

Orlando: A Biography is a novel by Virginia Woolf, first published on 11 October 1928. A high-spirited romp inspired by the tumultuous family history of Woolf's lover and close friend, the aristocratic poet and novelist Vita Sackville-West, it is arguably one of Woolf's most popular novels: a history of English literature.

The book describes the adventures of a poet who changes sex from man to woman and lives for centuries, meeting the key figures of English literary history.

Considered a feminist classic, the book has been written about extensively by scholars of women's writing and gender and transgender studies.

It is useless to tell the story of "Orlando", in this novel one story is mixed with another.

It is as if we are caught in a labyrinth of stories, the main character, born in the time of "Queen Elizabeth", never dies, but in every period, and in every century, the skin changes; Someone else becomes, to reach the age of the reader.

The novel shows the transformation in every moment of life, "Orlando", face to face, makes a different face, sometimes a man, and the ambassador, sometimes a woman, and with a gypsy, shepherds a sheep, sometimes a "lord", And his house is a gathering of elders, and statesmen, and at other times a poet and a recluse.

But what he always seeks: is life, and is always fascinated by writing, continues to write at the height of despair, and at the pinnacle of happiness.

鬲丕乇蹖禺 賳禺爻鬲蹖賳 禺賵丕賳卮: 乇賵夭 丿賵丕夭丿賴賲 賲丕賴 賲蹖 爻丕賱 2009賲蹖賱丕丿蹖

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毓賳賵丕賳: 丕乇賱丕賳丿賵貨 賳賵蹖爻賳丿賴: 賵蹖乇噩蹖賳蹖丕 賵賵賱賮貨 賲鬲乇噩賲: 賮乇夭丕賳賴 賯賵噩賱賵貨 鬲賴乇丕賳貙 賳卮乇 賯胤乇賴貙 1386貨 丿乇 310氐貨 趩丕倬 丿賵賲 1388貨 趩丕倬 爻賵賲 1395貨 卮丕亘讴9789643416782貨

亘蹖賴賵丿賴 丕爻鬲 讴賴 亘禺賵丕賴賲 丿丕爻鬲丕賳 芦丕乇賱丕賳丿賵禄 乇丕 亘丕夭诏賵 讴賳賲貙 丿乇 丕蹖賳 乇賲丕賳 丿丕爻鬲丕賳蹖 亘賴 丿丕爻鬲丕賳 丿蹖诏乇 賲蹖丌賲蹖夭丿貨 诏賵蹖蹖 丿乇 賴夭丕乇鬲賵蹖蹖 丕夭 賯氐賴貙 诏乇賮鬲丕乇 丌賲丿賴 亘丕卮蹖賲貙 卮禺氐蹖鬲 丕氐賱蹖貙 丿乇 夭賲丕賳 芦賲賱讴賴 丕賱蹖夭丕亘鬲禄 亘賴 丿賳蹖丕 賲蹖丌蹖丿貙 賴乇诏夭 賳賲蹖賲蹖乇丿貙 亘賱讴賴 丿乇 賴乇 丿賵乇賴貙 賵 丿乇 賴乇 爻丿賴貙 倬賵爻鬲 毓賵囟 賲蹖讴賳丿貨 讴爻 丿蹖诏乇 賲蹖卮賵丿貙 鬲丕 亘賴 毓氐乇 禺賵丕賳卮诏乇 亘乇爻丿貨 乇賲丕賳貙 丿诏乇诏賵賳蹖 丿乇 賴乇 賱丨馗賴 夭蹖爻鬲賳 乇丕貙 亘賴 賳賲丕蹖卮 賲蹖诏匕丕乇丿貙 芦丕乇賱丕賳丿賵禄貙 丿賲 亘賴 丿賲貙 趩賴乇賴 丿蹖诏乇 賲蹖讴賳丿貙 夭賲丕賳蹖 賲乇丿 丕爻鬲貙 賵 爻賮蹖乇貙 诏丕賴 丿蹖诏乇 夭賳 丕爻鬲貙 賵 賴賲乇丕賴 讴賵賱蹖丕賳貙 诏賵爻賮賳丿 賲蹖趩乇丕賳丿貙 夭賲丕賳蹖 芦賱乇丿禄 丕爻鬲貙 賵 爻乇丕蹖 丕賵 賲丨賮賱 亘夭乇诏丕賳貙 賵 丿賵賱鬲賲乇丿丕賳貙 賵 夭賲丕賳蹖 丿蹖诏乇 卮丕毓乇 賵 诏賵卮賴 賳卮蹖賳 丕爻鬲貨 丕賲丕 丌賳趩賴 丕賵 賴賲蹖卮賴 賲蹖噩賵蹖丿: 夭賳丿诏蹖 丕爻鬲貙 賵 賴賲蹖卮賴 卮蹖賮鬲賴 蹖 賳賵卮鬲賳 丕爻鬲貙 丿乇 丕賵噩 賳丕丕賲蹖丿蹖貙 賵 丿乇 賯賱賴 賴丕蹖 卮丕丿蹖貙 賴賲趩賳丕賳 賲蹖賳賵蹖爻丿

鬲丕乇蹖禺 亘賴賳诏丕賲 乇爻丕賳蹖 08/09/1399賴噩乇蹖 禺賵乇卮蹖丿蹖貨 15/06/1400賴噩乇蹖 禺賵乇卮蹖丿蹖貨 丕. 卮乇亘蹖丕賳蹖
Profile Image for Cecily.
1,281 reviews5,068 followers
January 2, 2023
Orlando. or-LAN-do. Wrap your tongue around it, and whisper it. There鈥檚 a luscious, syrupy, sensual, mysterious feel. Much like the eponymous hero(ine), and the sumptuously described natural and man-made world Orlando inhabits.

The name conjures cross-dressing disguises in Shakespeare鈥檚 , a Marmalade Cat, maybe or , and, for Google, theme parks in Florida. If you know the novel鈥檚 USP and Greek mythology, you may also think of and .


Image: Tilda Swinton as Orlando, leaning against an oak tree, the title of 翱谤濒补苍诲辞鈥檚 lifelong poem (.)

My first encounters with Woolf were not positive. I didn鈥檛 鈥済et鈥� in 2008. Orlando fared a little better shortly after. Last year, I read Night and Day (see my review HERE) and gained confidence to read more Woolf.

The Sex Thing - is not the only thing

I reread Orlando because in recent years, I鈥檝e been dabbling in books that explore gender (see my shelf HERE). That reflects shifts in society as well as my own family.

But despite the famous and definite opening line, 鈥淗e - for there could be no doubt about his sex鈥�, readers shouldn鈥檛 obsess about it. One aspect I love about Orlando, and also Jeffrey Eugenides鈥� Middlesex, is that the switch of sex, though vital, is just one of many facets. In Middlesex, there are a dozen other types of transition (listed in my review HERE).

翱谤濒补苍诲辞鈥檚 diversity comes from genre and content. It is a pre-postmodern magical-realist mashup that slips effortlessly between fictionalised biography (with the biographer reporting their frustrations to the reader); pontifciations on high society; homage to, quotes from, and satire of famous writers and critics; queer feminist tract; numerous parallels with the detailed history of Vita Sackville-West's family and home (Knole); the pains of love sought and lost; streams of consciousness; comical wooing; the inspiration, methods, and frustrations of writing, especially for women; the emptiness of wealth (shades of Gatsby, which I reviewed HERE); sensuous descriptions of nature, clothes, and furnishings; and it鈥檚 all wrapped up with an almost trippy ending.

The Plot

鈥�Time passed鈥� and nothing whatever happened.鈥�

This is not primarily a plot-driven novel, and for Orlando, time is as flexible as sex/gender.

"He would go out after breakfast a man of thirty and come home to dinner a man of fifty five at least. Some weeks added a century to his age, others no more than three seconds."

Orlando is a teenage nobleman in the court of Elizabeth I. He communes with nature and writes prolifically. He has lovers of both/ambiguous sexes, and adventures with Russians, Turks, and gypsies. Decades later, but only around 30 years old, Orlando awakes as a woman. This is barely mentioned by her or others, nor the fact she lives for another 300 years without aging noticeably. No explanation is sought or suggested. Its relevance is limited to observing the differing constraints on women through the ages, and offstage legal battles to inherit what only a man can inherit.

鈥�She need neither fight her age, nor submit to it. She was of it, yet remained herself.鈥�
(Here, 鈥渁ge鈥� refers to historical period, rather than number of birthdays.)

If it鈥檚 not about 翱谤濒补苍诲辞鈥檚 sex or the plot, what IS it about?

翱谤濒补苍诲辞鈥檚 core character and interests are consistent: nature, literature, and later, a quest for 鈥渓ife and a lover鈥�.

In terms of sex, Orlando is the essence of fluidity, embracing all aspects of both (Woolf takes a binary view) in herself and her lovers: the differences are simultaneously profound and unremarked. When Orlando first realises he is now she, 鈥渟he showed no surprise鈥�.

鈥�His form combined in one the strength of a man and a woman鈥檚 grace鈥� Orlando had become a woman鈥� But in every other respect, Orlando remained precisely as he had been. The change of sex, though it altered their future, did nothing whatever to alter their identity.鈥�


Image: One from the series "Human Metamorphosis" by Taylor James (.)

For me, that鈥檚 the essential message of Orlando: be true to yourself, regardless of externally defined labels. That applies as much to the genre-defying book, as to Orlando the person. Labels can be useful, but they should only ever be descriptive, not prescriptive.

鈥�Different though the sexes are, they intermix. In every human being a vacillation from one sex to the other takes place, and often it is only the clothes that keep the male or female likeness.鈥�

Orlando changes outwardly, but before and after, over the centuries, Orlando is always a colourful, fluid mix.


Image: A violet marbled end paper from a Folio Society book. (Short video of it being made .)

鈥�He had eyes like drenched violets.鈥�

This book is famously a love-letter to Vita, but it鈥檚 suffused with violets: 翱谤濒补苍诲辞鈥檚 eyes; flowers, obviously; but also clouds of autumn; shades; shadows, and (unstated) Trefusis - Vita鈥檚 previous lover.

Quotes

鈥淚llusions are to the soul what atmosphere is to the earth.鈥�

鈥淩ussia where the sunsets are longer, the dawns less sudden, and sentences often left unfinished.鈥�

鈥淢emory is a seamstress, and a capricious one at that.鈥�

鈥淪ociety is everything and society is nothing.鈥� (Sounds like Wilde.)

Quotes about Literature
鈥� 鈥淣ow all young writers were in the pay of the booksellers and poured out any trash that would sell.鈥� In the 16th/17th century.

鈥� 鈥淲hile fame impedes and constricts, obscurity wraps about a man like a mist.鈥�

鈥� "Material luxury evaporated like so much sea mist under the miasma. So it was, and Orlando would sit by himself, reading, a naked man."

鈥� 鈥淪urely, since she is a woman, and a beautiful woman, and a woman in the prime of life, she will soon give over this pretence of writing and thinking and begin at least to think of a gamekeeper.鈥�

Quotes about Love
鈥� 鈥淎s he looked the thickness in his blood melted; the ice turned to wine in his veins; he heard the waters flowing and birds singing.鈥� Suddenly lovestruck. Then bathos: he merely asks her to pass the salt.

鈥� 鈥淥rlando heard鈥� far off the beating of Love鈥檚 wings. The distant stir of that soft plumage roused in him a thousand memories of rushing waters, of loveliness in the snow and faithlessness in the flood.鈥�

鈥� 鈥淟ove鈥� has two faces; one white, the other black; two bodies; one smooth, the other hairy鈥� each one is the exact opposite of the other. Yet, so strictly are they joined together that you cannot separate them.鈥�

鈥� 鈥淣othing... is more heavenly than to resist and to yield; to yield and to resist.鈥�

鈥� 鈥淪he was married, true; but if one's husband was always sailing round Cape Horn, was it marriage? If one liked him, was it marriage? If one liked other people, was it marriage? And finally, if one still wished, more than anything in the whole world, to write poetry, was it marriage?鈥�

鈥� 鈥淏ut love - as the male novelists define it - and who, after all, speak with greater authority? - has nothing whatever to do with kindness, fidelity, generosity, or poetry. Love is slipping off one's petticoat and - But we all know what love is.鈥�

Quotes about Weather/Seasons
Significant changes are marked by dramatic weather:

鈥� 鈥淓verything was different. The weather itself... of another temper altogether. The brilliant amorous day was divided as sheerly from the night as land from water. Sunsets were redder and more intense; dawns were whiter and more auroral. Of our crepuscular half-lights lingering twilights they knew nothing. The rain fell vehemently, or not at all.鈥�

鈥� 鈥淭he equable but confused light of a summer鈥檚 morning in which everything is seen but nothing is seen distinctly.鈥�

鈥� 鈥淭he sun鈥� was so girt about with clouds and the air was so saturated with water, that its beams were discoloured and purples, oranges, and reds of a dull sort took the place of the more positive landscapes鈥� Under this bruised and sullen canopy the green of the cabbages was less intense, and the white of the snow was muddied.鈥�

Quotes about Clothes
鈥� 鈥淪he fell to thinking what an odd pass we have come to when all a woman鈥檚 beauty has to be kept covered lest a sailor may fall from a mast-head.鈥� Relevant today for debates about burqas, victim-blaming, and rape culture.

鈥� 鈥淐lothes鈥� change our view of the world and the world鈥檚 view of us.鈥�

鈥� 鈥淚t is clothes that wear us and not we them.鈥�

鈥� 鈥淐lothes are but a symbol of something hid deep beneath.鈥� The very definition of a sacrament.

See also

鈥� Jeanette Winterson's preface to the Folio edition, HERE.

鈥� Jeanette Winterson's own spin on this story in The Powerbook, which I reviewed HERE.

Profile Image for Violet wells.
433 reviews4,210 followers
August 6, 2017
My second reading of Orlando bore out my overriding impression the first time I read it 鈥� that this is a brilliant comic performance until Woolf, before finishing, runs out of steam. Towards the end it becomes apparent she鈥檚 no longer in the same spirit with which she began the book. What begins as pure parody ends up a serious attempt to understand her subject. The delicious light skip of her lyrical irony no longer seems at the beck and call of her wit towards the end. You can sense, even see that she鈥檚 already beginning to formulate both A Room of one鈥檚 Own and The Waves. Her lightly handled mischievous mockery of the conventional historian and biographer is replaced by a more heavy handed feminist polemic and awkward, overly lyrical philosophical musings on the nature of fame and multiple incarnations of self. She鈥檚 lost the original spirit. It鈥檚 as if a children鈥檚 play about pirates and mermaids ends with a religious sermon. As Shakespeare demonstrated, if you start off silly, you should probably end silly. Imagine if at the end of As You Like It all the characters held forth on the psychological and philosophical connotations of why they changed sex during the play. Basically, Virginia tries to force a resolution on this novel that is completely at odds with its spirit. And for that reason all the tension goes out of it in the last fifty pages.

The first half of Orlando pastiches the traditional historian/biographer as mischievously and hilariously as Nabokov鈥檚 brilliant Pale Fire pastiches establishment鈥檚 literary critic. It鈥檚 the work of a writer inspired, on a roll and thank heavens we have this evidence of Woolf鈥檚 comic genius. Anyone who thinks of Woolf as a rather pretentious humourless prig clearly hasn鈥檛 read Orlando. Of all her books it鈥檚 the one which most gives you an idea of what she was like at a dinner table. Thus, ironically, the most biographical in terms of giving us some essence of the social Virginia 鈥� offhand, witty, versatile, self-deprecating, a show off, intellectual, silly, indignant, giggling. Orlando is like a guided tour through VW鈥檚 likes and dislikes. We learn what pleases her and what angers her - and of course she writes beautifully of her love of England, its countryside, its history and its capital. There鈥檚 also a sense that she鈥檚 sometimes showing off with certain friends in mind 鈥� you realise while reading this book that there鈥檚 a subtle but hugely significant difference between genius in full stride and showing off: even though genius in full stride can seem like showing off it never quite does. You don鈥檛 see the performance. Here you sometimes can see the performance. You can see the anatomy of the dance steps rather than one continuous fluid motion. So who was she showing off to? I don鈥檛 think it was Vita at all. It might have started as a bit of fun with Vita in mind but to my mind it鈥檚 Lytton Strachey she鈥檚 often thinking about while writing this. He was the writer who sought to revolutionise biography as a form and probably the male intellect among her brother鈥檚 formally educated friends she was most intimidated by. It鈥檚 like she鈥檚 now found the confidence to feel herself his equal, which she didn鈥檛 feel as a young woman. While he was receiving his Cambridge education she was compelled to read many of the countless biographies in her father鈥檚 library. No wonder she hates conventional biography so much. Orlando was her revenge on all those dull male minds who believed identity was constructed from dates, battles, rank and official documents. The same kind of men who believed women were better seen and not heard. What does all this have to do with Vita? For me far too much has been made of her relationship with Vita. Nearly all my female friends have had lesbian crushes at some point in their lives. It鈥檚 something we laugh about; not something that history should use to define who we are. The idea that had Woolf lived in more tolerant times she would have lived happily in a lesbian relationship to my mind is just daft, as daft in its way as the convictions held by the historians and biographers she mocks in this book.

In relation to VW's other books I'd give this four stars but because it's clearly better than 99% of the books on 欧宝娱乐 it has to get five.
Profile Image for Piyangie.
587 reviews698 followers
July 23, 2024
Orlando is a biography written about a fictitious character, Orlando, which was inspired by Virginia's real-life friend and lover Vita Sackville-West. The story spans over 400 years where Orlando's life changes from man to woman, from century to century.

Gender difference is the main focus of the story. Through Orlando's transformation from man to woman, Virginia subtly exposes the gender difference or in her view the "gender neutrality". Virginia believed in gender neutrality, affirming that there is a male and female side in every human being irrespective of sex, and varying in degree. When Orlando wakes up as a woman, she feels no difference or any awkwardness; but, when she finally must confront society as a woman, Orlando understands there is a difference in self, at least outwardly. Thus the author hints that the inward self of man and woman are more or less similar, and it is the society's rules of conduct that make them different and categorize them into different genders.

As a subplot, Virginia dwells on the changes of literature and artists over the span of 400 years. Orlando could not publish his work in the early centuries, but the social changes and the difference of style and forms of literature over the years make once unpublished work to be finally published. Virginia is being satirical here, for she was a devotee of the great poets of the past and their strictly kept quality of writing. She points out how the quality is reduced and rules relaxed as the poets became the victims of publishing houses who wished to publish those that sell fast. She was quite sad over the plight of modern poets, for she firmly believed that poetry should be "a voice answering a voice".

Virginia has adopted a narrative style of writing for the most part of the story, but toward the end, this style is slowly changed into a conscious stream of writing. When I first attempted Virginia Woolf, I shied away immediately, as I couldn't get into the rhythm of her stream of consciousness. But in Orlando, since it was a gradual descent to the conscious stream from the narrative style, I was able to grasp the story and understand it better. And I was surprised to find that I liked her conscious stream of writing.

In this second reading, I found that I've completely missed yet another theme that Virginia has exposed through the story of Orlando. And that is the concept of change. It is one of Virginia's favourite themes and has been used in almost all the books I've read of her. Here, Virginia discloses the change of British society over four centuries, and how the lives of men and women have changed over the span of years. The story runs from the 16th century to the early 20th century, and Virginia describes in detail the change of the role of men and women. She specifically refers to 19th-century British society and its role of women. The dawn of the 19th century is described by her thus: "All was darkness; all was doubt; all was confusion". This is how Virginia saw Victorian society, with its heavy chains of convention, which unmercifully victimized women more than men. In no period of life than in the 19th century that Orlando regrets becoming a woman. But it is inevitable that Orlando cannot escape from what society expects from her; she must submit and adapt as best as she could to the change. And Orlando does this by taking a husband! :)

The whole story was a satirical account, and I had such a fun time rereading it. The word "fun" was something I never imagined attributing to a work of Virginia Woolf. But certainly, Orlando is the most entertaining work written by her.
Profile Image for Henk.
1,107 reviews152 followers
January 10, 2023
Fun, vibrant, modern and rich with live
Green in nature is one thing, green in literature another. Nature and letters seem to have a natural antipathy; bring them together and they tear each other to pieces.

General
The sheer fun and vibrancy that brings in this book is tremendous.
I can only compare it to the typical English humor found while reading , the first few whimsical pages of , while the lyrical nature of the work made me think of . Finally popped up in my mind while reading this classic, due to the same approach of large strides through time, caught in flowing prose.

Orlando compelled me to read on, through lush and flowy sentences, putting thoughts of disbelief and historical accuracy far behind me. Nowhere did the book feel like an almost 100 year old piece.

The Elizabethan age reimagined
The omniscient narrator (that I take to be Woolf) spices up the book. The first chapter starts off with how gets in Queen Elizabeth her favor, has him overlooking around 30 counties (very Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus like in my mind) and the armada from his house. We also have a hilarious story on how an almshouse was only founded to appease the guilty conscience of a Duke, accidently glancing Orlando and a conquest.
During the little ice age, with the Thames frozen over, we meet Russian beauty Marusha Stanislovska Dagmar Natasja Iliana Romanovitsj aka Sasja (with a delightfully build up romantic inner monologue ending with the majestic first words: 鈥淐ould you please pass me the salt?鈥�).
And then we have scandal materializing when Orlando tries to get rid of the engagement with Lady Margaret O鈥橞rien O鈥橠are O鈥橰eilly Tyrconnell aka Euphrosyne. We have beautiful iceskating scenes in the cold, where Woolf asserts that birds dropped frozen from the sky, people just crumbled from a gale of icy wind and everyday was a feast held outside on the frozen river in front of the palace.
It鈥檚 like a medieval knights tale, medieval work or , but than more successful in satirizing the day and age in a mischievous, tongue in the cheek manner.

The continuation of the narrative
Instead of being a single, downright, bluff piece of work of which no man need feel ashamed, our commonest deeds are set about with a fluttering and flickering of wings, a rising and falling of lights.

Chapter two starts of with our main character sleeping for an unexplained, mysterious (鈥渞eligion founding鈥� mysterious) full seven days. After this Orlando is kind of regenerated in a Doctor Who style and our narrator moves on with the tale since no answer on his strange condition is forthcoming in half an hour鈥檚 time. En passant we learn his house is like that in the Adam鈥檚 family, leading people to their untimely deaths, with the staff occasionally finding twisted remains and bones during cleaning.
Our main character falls victim to two plagues: reading and writing (For once the disease of reading has laid upon the system it weakens so that it falls an easy prey to that other scourge which dwells in the ink pot and festers in the quill. The wretch takes to writing.).
We have a poet/critic who embodies a yearning for citylife, that made me think of how Woolf herself was portrayed in .
But in the end Orlando turns away from fame and thinking of critique, decides to write just for pleasure and use anonymity to leave a mark on the world: ( Better was it to go unknown and leave behind you an arch, then to burn like a meteor and leave no dust.).

He then goes about homedecorating in the most extravagant way, until a the ugly head of love aka Romanian archduchess Harriet Griselda of Finster-Aarhorn and Scand-upon-Tree, turns up.

In chapter three Orlando flees to Constantinople as ambassador for Charles the second and gives the greatest party ever (I just saw pool scenes during this segment) before collapsing to another 7 days of sleep, and now a sex change. Contrary to what might be expected 翱谤濒补苍诲辞鈥檚 womanhood brings him much joy, ending with a simple life in Thessaly as a gypsy.
Butan old passion stirs (No passion is stronger in the breast of a man than the desire to make others believe as he believes. Nothing so cuts at the root of his happiness and fills him with rage as the sense that another rates low what he prizes high.) and she returns to England.

Life as a woman
Chapter four has Orlando getting to know her femininity and all the restrictions flowing from that moniker, from no longer showing her beautiful legs to being legally dead and a woman (which is basically the same thing as Woolf wryly notes).
The archduchess Harriet returns and turns out to be a man (archduke Harry) and Orlando can get rid of him not by sword or female wit, but by cheating and a toad conveniently carried around the whole day.
In London she discovers that a lady can鈥檛 go to the Mall without being squashed by the common people, given an emerald brooch and getting a marriage proposal. And she discovers the high society (At one and the same time, therefore, society is everything and society is nothing. Society is the most powerful concoction in the world and society has no existence whatsoever.), meets famous poets and writers, who all in the end dissapoint.
More and more she switches between gender expression and male and female lovers as the nineteenth century starts.

However chapter 5 has the winds of Victorian time sweeping into the life of Orlando and nature taking a prominent role. Her great poem The Oak ends up being published without much intrinsic satisfaction for her, but to great critical acclaim.
Societally speaking marriage becomes important; Orlando finds on the moors a fitting companion (who quickly notes she is a man at heart and of which she thinks: he鈥檚 just like a woman). This Marmaduke Bonthrop Shelmerdine leaves for South Africa at the end of the section.

Chapter six has Orlando alone (or with child, that's not really clear to me) crashing into the twentieth century. The great war is left in lieu for reflections on Orlando getting to the mature age of 36. Everything from this new age reminds her to earlier experiences and brings her memories. This leads her to think I鈥檓 sick to death of this particular self.
But she does like the vibrancy and speed of modern city life, while the love for the nature of England also persistently shines through. She remembers her husband and her history while we end the book at midnight Thursday 11 October 1928.

I feel Woolf covers so much topics and reflections on human experience in this book. But above all I found it a very modern, unique, vibrant and fun work, something not many classics can say.
5 stars

Initial response
Loved it, even worked from home this morning just to have some more time to finish this book in lieu of travel time. Full review to come!
Profile Image for Renato.
36 reviews142 followers
November 26, 2015
This was my first time reading . It was also my second time.

I like to think that everything happens for a reason - not that I believe it was planned or decided by a powerful creature for me - but because the idea that everything effects what surrounds it sounds about right to me. So I see a purpose in this reading experience that provided me and take it as an important lesson to carry with me from now on - and how appropriate that it came just at the beginning of a new and exciting year.

I鈥檝e always liked to plan things to the last detail in my life. With reading, unfortunately - and I say that because sometimes it becomes too much to follow-up on - it is the same. I had a strict schedule to read and I wanted to finish it by January 9th. The day arrived and I only had twenty pages or so left to finish the book, so great, another thing was on the right track. And then I realized nothing was on the right track. I had been racing through the book to comply with a deadline that I stipulated - for no authentic reason, really - in my head and I wasn鈥檛 enjoying it at all. Yes, I saw glimpses of brilliance here and there, and I loved the idea of the book since the beginning, plus the fact that I鈥檝e always admired both Woolf and her writing style, so it surprised (and bothered) me that I wasn鈥檛 actually having a great time with it. I put it down and analyzed the situation for two minutes - it was a no brainer, I know, but when you鈥檙e caught up in it, it may take a while to realize things - and then decided to start over. To read everything once again, including the Introduction that I skipped the first time. Oh my! What about my schedule? It would have to give in. So I went back to the beginning, with hopes of a better read this time and without a deadline. After thirty pages or so, I realized the blur I had read for racing through the words felt really different and so much better now, as if I had just put on my reading glasses.

Forget mostly everything you know from Woolf and expect to find here based on previous works - it鈥檚 a departure from them, almost completely. became famous for being an account of a single day of a person鈥檚 life; to counter that, we read in this book more than three hundred years of 翱谤濒补苍诲辞鈥檚 life. is known for its stream of consciousness style that is intertwined with the plot and characters' lines and actions, making it a complex read; this novel is straightforward and presented in the format of a biography of the character Orlando - one would say the novel is actually semi-biographical as it鈥檚 been widely known that the protagonist is based on Vita Sackville-West, an English writer who鈥檚 been romantically involved with Woolf; because of that, the novel is seen as a love-letter to Vita. More than that, it is a love letter to literature, to the exercise of writing and to writers. It takes us on a grand literary journey throughout the centuries - kind of an expanded Oxen of the Sun from - where Virginia emulates some styles and eras in her writing - although still making her book easily accessible as opposed to what Joyce did in the specified episode.

This biography tells us the story of Orlando, an individual born as a biological male who lives for more than three hundred years. Seems interesting enough, right? There鈥檚 more: at around thirty years of age, he wakes up to find out a change has occurred: he鈥檚 mysteriously been transformed into a woman; he (she) is now biologically female. This is the basic frame of the novel.

But truly, what I most admired and enjoyed in this work was Woolf. I love how she comprehended and created her protagonist as someone constituted of dissimilarities and paradoxes all throughout the times. If we, inside of one year, change our minds so often, imagine someone living for three centuries. Not only did this gave a touch of realism to this distinct story, but it also kept 翱谤濒补苍诲辞鈥檚 character as being fresh, not determined from beginning to end and, above all, unpredictable.

What I mostly got from 翱谤濒补苍诲辞鈥檚 character was the sense of solitude and constant search. Despite being surrounded by people throughout centuries, Orlando was really in search of herself, of who he was, of what she was - really, in search of a meaning, of a purpose, of her individuality. It didn鈥檛 help, of course, that on the times he opened up and trusted people, she ended up being betrayed by them, only renewing his sense of loneliness. Notwithstanding, she still seemed to worry so much about people鈥檚 opinions and conceptions about him, for she was longing to fit somewhere.

翱谤濒补苍诲辞鈥檚 freedom - for so to speak - came from an epiphany he had while struggling about his writings, when she realized that in need to be true to himself, she needed to write first and foremost for herself, leaving all glory aside that for a moment she considered seeking for herself - again proving his need to fit, to be accepted. Following this moment, Orlando found the necessity of taking care of his house, which I interpreted as a clear metaphor that she, from that moment on, wanted to value himself, his story, her lineage, the foundation: he was, for once, proud of being who she was.

"He stretched himself. He rose. He stood upright in complete nakedness before us, and while the trumpets pealed Truth! Truth! Truth! we have no choice left but confess 鈥� he was a woman."

Although Virginia made a decision to not explain or address too much the sex change - and I applaud her for that, for it was treated naturally (despite the amazing scene, one of the best in the novel, where the three sisters Chastity, Purity and Modesty tried to cover the beautiful transformation) as all gender issues should be, for they鈥檙e not, in my opinion, much more than a simple detail that constitutes us such as our height and weight -, I wanted to at least acknowledge here on my humble review how brilliant she was for writing so bravely - and yet with a much admirable lightness - on a subject that still, in 2015, is such a taboo to our society. Virginia wrote as if the sexually defined roles were no more than fantasies that could easily be stripped off for the benefit of another that better suited the individual.

Still on Woolf鈥檚 levity in addressing the change, the reflections made by Orlando right after becoming a woman were really fun and interesting to read. His comparisons between the genders and her efforts in learning how to act, be and think had a subtle but undeniable touch of sarcasm. Orlando trying to readjust her behavior after becoming a woman, to comply to what was expected of her - and this was a constant for him because, outside the gender issue, the character goes through a lot of different eras and times, each one with silly defined roles by society - , felt like someone who needed to learn to walk again, or rather someone who鈥檚 been through a short period of blindness and regains sight, only to find out, this time, that the world is under different lights and colors, as if the sun had been changed to blue, or pink.

"Memory is the seamstress, and a capricious one at that. Memory runs her needle in and out, up and down, hither and thither. We know not what comes next, or what follows after. Thus, the most ordinary movement in the world, such as sitting down at a table and pulling the inkstand towards one, may agitate a thousand odd, disconnected fragments, now bright, now dim, hanging and bobbing and dipping and flaunting, like the underlinen of a family of fourteen on a line in a gale of wind."

Other aspect that was surely to please me was Woolf鈥檚 addressing to memory, time and consciousness - topics I鈥檝e been reading about for quite some time. Still, she was able to add her own twist to those and seemingly inverted Proust鈥檚 approach: instead of showing the moment that the past resurfaces through an involuntary memory, she shows us the present fighting back to regain the mind鈥檚 control, mostly through sounds that awake Orlando again, as if the present was actually screaming for attention.

Back to the first time I attempted to read this book, and also one of the changes I made that contributed to my new-found enjoyment of it was about reading the notes included in my edition. I seem to have a love/hate relationship with notes; while they鈥檙e completely essential in some books, practically part of the narrative and elucidative to the comprehension of the work, in others they are simply too distracting without adding much to the experience. My edition has 262 notes (for a book that has about 240 pages.) Most were about the parallels between Vita鈥檚 life and 翱谤濒补苍诲辞鈥檚, and those I found to be unnecessary. After I stopped reading all of them and only payed attention to the ones that promised to add to my understanding, my reading flow also improved.

: although it hasn鈥檛 been acclaimed either by critics nor the public, I was very much curious to watch the film from 1992, directed by Sally Potter, to see how Woolf鈥檚 narrative would de adapted into the screen. While it had some nice moments, and most of them provided by Tilda Swinton鈥檚 talents who plays Orlando greatly, others were a great disappointment: to justify 翱谤濒补苍诲辞鈥檚 longer than usual life by making it a gift from the Queen is completely unnecessary; after that, I was scared they would also try to justify the sex change - gladly, that wasn鈥檛 the case. Having Orlando constantly looking at the camera in attempts to connect to the viewer felt forced and became very predictable and - what I think must have been the sole reason the director decided on using those - also didn鈥檛 match the wit that Woolf achieved by having the biographer addressing the reader in several occasions. It was a fun time watching the film, but it doesn鈥檛 stand on its own like the novel gracefully does.

Rating: for a book that, under 300 pages, packed not only a great story, with wonderful wit and humor, written brilliantly, but also taught me an important lesson: 5 stars.
Profile Image for Sarah.
2,135 reviews85 followers
August 10, 2010
Vita Sackville-West's son may have called Orlando 鈥渢he longest and most charming love-letter in literature鈥�, but let me tell you: if someone wrote me a love letter like this, their ass would be getting dumped shortly thereafter.

This book was like the song that wouldn't end- it just goes on and on (yet it isn't particularly lengthy) without saying very much of interest. Despite the fact that reading it was a serious chore, for whatever reason I couldn't just give up and toss it aside (much like being unable to look away from a flaming car wreck). I pushed through, even though I often couldn't bring myself to read more than a few pages at a time. It took me several weeks to finish.

However odd the movie was (and in spite of the fact I have the distinct impression that Tilda Swinton wanted to eat my soul), I still enjoyed it more than the book (which is not a statement I make lightly- I almost never like a movie more than its source material).

I think part of the problem was the fact that Orlando was a boring, whiny, immature character who took hundreds of years to grow up. Since the book is pretty much entirely about Orlando, if one is not a fan, the book is not exactly fun to read.
Profile Image for 尝耻铆蝉.
2,271 reviews1,173 followers
March 19, 2024
I was careful not to take this reading to the beach. That would have been entirely inappropriate. So, instead, I saved Orlando for the start of the school year, a little more attentive for my first Virginia Woolf. However, I had to be a bit sloppy at the end because I thought of reading a whole exercise in an impressive and original style, but I could not give it the concentration it deserved.
I drew to the back cover. This writer, who lived centuries, dies to come back to life as a woman but always with the human spirit. I liked the character writer, who was passionate about reading and writing.
It's a timeless, fantastic, utterly offbeat tale that deserves much more focus than I had to give it, and I struggled to finish it correctly.
Even though I liked the author's intrusion to guide the reader, setting the scene and the character.
Profile Image for Paul.
1,392 reviews2,118 followers
December 4, 2013
I first read this many years ago; before I knew very much about Virginia Woolf and her relationship with Vita Sackville-West, to whom this is dedicated. The background is vital because it adds so much and because it helps the reader to reach an understanding of Woolf鈥檚 generosity. It is as ever, beautifully written and drifts splendidly through the centuries and the key is Vita and their circle.
As Woolf was writing this her affair with Vita was beginning to wane as Vita was moving on to other lovers. The two women were very different and Vita was much more sexually active and interested in a variety of people. For Vita the thrill of the new was important. Woolf recognised this.
One of the keys to the book is Vita鈥檚 ancestral home, Knole. It is faithfully represented as 翱谤濒补苍诲辞鈥檚 home estate in the book, down to the heraldic leopards and the visit of Queen Elizabeth the First. Vita had lost Knole because a woman could not inherit; here Woolf gives her it back.
Many of the characters represent people both knew. The Russian princess Sasha is Violet Trefusis, Nicholas Greene is Gosse, Archduchess Harriet/Archduke Henry was Lord Lascelles (one of Vita鈥檚 many admirers), Shelmerdine is Vita鈥檚 husband Harold Nicholson. 翱谤濒补苍诲辞鈥檚 poetic work The Oak Tree is equivalent to Vita鈥檚 poetic work The Land.
There is a great deal of imagery here; some of it in the form of private jokes/codes. The 鈥減orpoise in a fishmonger鈥檚 shop鈥� is one such (no idea what that one means). The imagery around the goose that crops up a couple of times even confused Vita (Vita was much more literal than Woolf)! It is interesting to consider that originally Woolf had conceived it as an illustrated book with photographs and pictures. Woolf鈥檚 portrayal was an accurate one. Harold Nicholson found it difficult to conceive that anyone else could know the private Vita that he knew and thought it was a lucky accident (it wasn鈥檛, Woolf was very perceptive). Mary Campbell (another of Vita鈥檚 lovers) was also surprised how accurately the private Vita was portrayed.
On top of this being a love letter to Vita, it is so much more besides. The nature of gender and biography are explored. It is also interesting to note that Woolf was also writing the lectures that became A Room of One鈥檚 Own. Orlando is part of the train of thought Woolf had about the revolutionary potential of women鈥檚 friendship. A new world opens when like each other and are no longer seen as rival鈥檚 for men鈥檚 affection/approval.
It is a tender and humorous love story/letter, almost a faitytale, not meant to be taken in the same vein as more serious work (To The Lighthouse), but it captures the imagination and sold much more than anything Woolf had written previously. It is a work of brilliance with a lightness of touch.
Profile Image for Kenny.
575 reviews1,418 followers
April 12, 2025
Orlando naturally loved solitary places, vast views, and to feel himself for ever and ever and ever alone.
~~~


1

鈥檚 1928 novel is a romping, time-travelling feminist escapade. The protagonist, Orlando, begins life as a handsome, young, male, seventeenth-century aristocrat who changes gender and moves towards 1928 ~~ pivotal as the year which saw the granting of universal voting to women. Not only does Woolf鈥檚 spiritual narrative comment on contemporary questions of traditional gender roles but interrogates assumptions that differences between men and women are innate ~~ natural.

An epic novel, it follows the journey of one character, Orlando, over the course of about 350 years ~~ 1588 鈥� 1928. Although Orlando is properly titled Orlando A Biography , it is not, however, a biography of Orlando, but of the nature and history of gender, identity, and sexuality through time.

1

At the start of the novel, readers will encounter Orlando as a young boy of noble birth. His family entertains Queen Elizabeth I, who is the first to notice 翱谤濒补苍诲辞鈥檚 beauty and potential. As he ages ~~ slowly ~~ Orlando will spend much of his time with 鈥渓ow鈥� people 鈥� those well-outside the realm of nobility, though he himself is a member of the court.

Orlando explores and enjoys sexual relations with people of varying types ~~ though each of his three serious ventures into love soon goes sour. Orlando will twice mistake the loves of his life for the wrong gender ~~ which is particularly complex after Orlando himself has become a woman, remembering himself as a man, loving a man who is actually a woman.

翱谤濒补苍诲辞鈥檚 story is one of exploration and being open to the many possibilities of life. He is a writer, first, who spends hundreds of years working on one short poem called The Oak Tree , a strong symbol of nature鈥檚 presence and dominance throughout the passage of time.

Orlando witnesses the world changing, from the sexual freedom and marriageless years of the Elizabethan period, to the stringent, stuffy, prudish world of the Victorian age.

At a certain point, s/he wakes up to the present and is terrified, realizing that she suddenly exists in the now, and it is a now that she no longer recognizes, where women are property, where love is regulated, and where art and literature exist only in the past.

1

In approaching questions of gender, Woolf takes a long view ~~ as stated previously, 350 years long. Orlando defies this passing of time, living for hundreds of years and crossing gender boundaries to suggest that male/female binaries are little more than a performance. Woolf fully illuminates her conclusions by exposing how patriarchal gender regulations and restrictive social conservatisms reinforce artificial gender stereotypes.

, though massive in scale, brilliant in conception, and beautiful in execution, was actually considered by Woolf to be a writer鈥檚 holiday, so to speak. She refused to allow gender nor time to constrain her writing, which is shown by the fact that Orlando, who begins the story as a man and ends it as a woman, four centuries later, ages only 36 years in the process.

What is most fascinating for me is the fact that the book was, for Woolf, a game of sorts ~~ a lighter satire and departure from her more serious works; yet, is incredibly important and speaks seriously, though fantastically, to issues of self-discovery, truth, art, and gender.

1
Profile Image for Steven Godin.
2,749 reviews3,160 followers
July 5, 2023

I knew for sure I wasn't expecting anything like 'To the Lighthouse' with Orlando, but what I didn't know is just how much I'd end up liking it. Woolf has broken with tradition and convention and has set out to explore a kind of fourth dimensional approach to writing. Not that she has abandoned the stream of consciousness method which she used with such conspicuous success in her previous novels, but with it she has combined what, for lack of a better term, we might describe as an application to writing of the theory of relativity. In this novel, or biography, however one chooses to see it, she is largely preoccupied with the time element in character and human relationships, and with a statement of the exact complexion of that intangible moment, a combination of past and future, of objective reality and subjective awareness, which we refer to as the present.

Woolf鈥檚 hero-heroine, man-woman, he-she, is hundreds of years old, lucky him/her! At the beginning of the book Orlando is an adolescent male, melancholic, indolent, loving solitude and given to writing poetry; the age is the Elizabethan; the book ends on the 11th of October, 1928, and Orlando is a thoroughly modern matron of 36, who has published a successful book of poems and has evolved a hard-earned philosophy of life. Thus, to express her very modern fourth-dimensional concepts, Woolf has fallen back upon one of the most ancient of literary forms, the allegory. In doing so she has left the novel perhaps more confusing than was strictly necessary. However, I personally think nothing should have been any different. I can see why for some it's seen as a masterpiece.

Starting around the time of The Great Frost of 1608/09 where birds froze whilst flying and hurtled to the ground, Orlando moves on to languorous sunny afternoons spent in the shade of oak trees and the hot sun of Turkey. Even so, this could be classed as a winter read. As Orlando never leaves the ice entirely, since he, and then she, is simply frozen in time. Even hundreds of years later there remains the same person who fell in love on those winter days in the 17th century, and those heady days breathe their cold magic throughout this strange and bewildering novel. Plus, Woolf can't resist returning to the cold now and again, most notably in her description of the permanent winter damp and black cloud that hung over the 19th century.

After 翱谤濒补苍诲辞鈥檚 attempts to adjust herself to the conventions of nineteenth century England. Woolf excels with by far the most stimulating section of the book, describing Orlando at the present moment, and traces with breath-taking delicacy the influence of her past upon her present. It is deep in the book when suddenly Orlando springs startlingly to life, not that there was anything wrong previously, but up to a point it had seemed a pleasant narrative made notable by a number of passages of great beauty, love and attention, and by occasional bits of vivid description, but marred slightly by a rather self-conscious mischievousness on the part of the author. Having said that, even it's worst bits were still good.

In the closing pages she welds compactly what had seemed to be a series of loosely connected episodes. In them she seems to reach down into the rabbit hole for the whole superstructure of life and to lay bare a new, or at least a hitherto unperceived, arrangement of those ephemeral flashes of memory of perception that makes up consciousness. But she has carried the stream of consciousness technique a step further. Not being satisfied to present a succession of thoughts and sensations passing through the mind, she shows what is behind those thoughts and sensations, whence they spring, and how great their relative value. In attempting to describe such subtle and elusive qualities, Woolf has faced squarely one of the most puzzling technical and esthetic problems that plague contemporary novelists. The mere fact that she has stated the problem as succinctly as she does in the course of this book is immensely stimulating, whether or not one feels that she has achieved the final solution to it.

A dizzy and captivating reading experience, but just not quite up there with The Waves. Just hope I don't wake up in the morning and find I am now Stephanie.
Profile Image for Mark Andr茅 .
189 reviews332 followers
August 15, 2018
My first Woolf novel. Inventive. Entertaining. Page-turner.
Though the plot stagnates in the final two chapters.
So what gender issues does the author present?
Men don't take female thinking seriously.
Marriage, who needs it. Pregnancy, who needs it.
Men, after sex, roll-off, light a cigarette, and turn on the game. Who needs it.
Profile Image for Paul Bryant.
2,362 reviews11.9k followers
February 3, 2012
What's the connection between Virginia Woolf and the Russian mafia? Easy - in 1991 Sally Potter decided to film Orlando, one of the loveliest, most ravishing novels in the English language. Somewheres in the middle of the story there, you have a truly extraordinary sequence about the remarkable Frost Fair of 1654, which was when the River Thames itself froze over and they erected a fair with stalls and games and rides and greased pigs and whatnot on it, a carnival of the utmost brilliancy right on the river itself, and there was skating and flirting and people built fires, right on the river itself, and Orlando cut a dash amongst the Elizabethans and many curious and longing glances were thrown.

So Sally Potter needed a frozen river. Where do rivers freeze these days, what with global warming?

Kiev. The Dneiper.

So they went to Kiev and got permission to film from the newly elected Ukrainian local government. Signed all the forms in triplicate, paid their taxes. Great.

But then the hotel door banged open and some big guys came in and said to Sally Potter and her pals

We know you have made arrangement with the politicians. Now you must make arrangement with us.

Who?

Just the boys who really run Kiev, is who.

So they paid some more taxes. And didn't ask for a receipt.

I remember Sally potter telling this story with great gusto when I saw her introduce this movie at Nottingham's arthouse. In retrospect, she thought it was hilarious. Not while it was happening.

Orlando is a lucent multicoloured gleam of a novel, bending the gending a few decades before we even realised that trannies weren't little radios anymore, before we realised that boys will be girls will be boys and that it's a mixed up muddled up shook up world.

Except for Orlando.

Profile Image for Ilse.
537 reviews4,216 followers
November 16, 2021


For if it is rash to walk into a lion鈥檚 den unarmed, rash to navigate the Atlantic in a rowing boat, rash to stand on one foot on top of St. Paul鈥檚, it is still more rash to go home alone with a poet. A poet is Atlantic and lion in one. While one drowns us the other gnaws us. If we survive the teeth, we succumb to the waves. A man who can destroy illusions is both beast and flood. Illusions are to the soul what atmosphere is to the earth. Roll up that tender air and the plant dies, the colour fades. The earth we walk on is a parched cinder. It is marl we tread and fiery cobbles scorch our feet. By the truth we are undone. Life is a dream. 鈥楾is waking that kills us. He who robs us of our dreams robs us of our life.



(Illustrations: Helena Perez Garcia)
Profile Image for Samadrita.
295 reviews5,121 followers
July 9, 2013
The most prudent way to review a Virginia Woolf book, perhaps, would be to write 'THIS IS STUPENDOUS. GENIUS. AMAZING. WHY HAVEN'T YOU READ THIS YET?' and leave it at that. Because not only does this relieve you of the responsibility of casting about for appropriate words to serenade Woolf but also because you know no review in the world does justice to the sheer magic that she is capable of creating with words.
But since I have a thing for self-flagellation(not really), I wish to undertake precisely this mammoth task of writing about Orlando.

After having closed the book and put it aside, the first predominant emotions are that of being overwhelmed by the all-encompassing nature of its inherent themes, then awestruck, then of being very close to tears.
One is compelled to sit quietly in a corner, still under the heady influence of Orlando's poetic prose, and brood over all the discrete human sentiments, actions and events that make up life as we know it, letting precious minutes trickle by.

Our hero-heroine, Orlando, seems not only to be a representation of the human spirit, a union of yin and yang in all its imperfect glory, but also a lasting testament to the perpetual flow of time. His-her pronouncements sound almost like a chorus of voices, echoing all the dichotomies that characterize our existence and the transience of our emotions.
Orlando begins the journey of life as a man of wealth and social standing in Elizabethan era England, comfortable in the skin of his vanity, amorous in his dalliances with women. And the book ends on 11th of October, 1928, in modern England where Orlando is a married woman, a mother, an accomplished writer and finally at peace with life's many ironies and caprices. I will refrain from going into all that takes place between these two distant points in time because for that one can always read the book.

It will suffice to say that Orlando swings back and forth between craving and shunning love, between pursuing his-her literary interests and trivializing the urge to write, between seeking the august company of men of letters like Pope, Addison and Swift and then belittling them. And even though hundreds of years pass by as Orlando goes through the many myriad experiences that life had in store for him-her, it seems like everything has remained essentially the same. The reader is struck by a sense of passivity in motion, of an enduring constancy even though the sights and sounds and scenarios, that Orlando flits through, keep varying.

Thus in a way Orlando is not different from Woolf's other works just because of the noticeable absence of a stream of consciousness(which, again, is not totally absent here) but because here, she attempts to grasp at an amorphous entity like time and enclose it within a few pages. And I am mightily pleased to say that she pulls off this feat with an elan, one associates only with her.
What makes Orlando really stand out among other VW works is the dual gender of its protagonist. Orlando keeps oscillating between his-her manly and womanly bearings and towards the very end, what nullifies the differences between the sexes is his-her humanity, his-her detachment from the material world and a crossover into the realm of the spiritual.

"The whole of her darkened and settled, as when some foil whose addition makes the round and solidity of a surface is added to it, and the shallow becomes deep and the near distant; and all is contained as water is contained by the sides of a well. So she was now darkened, stilled, and become, with the addition of this Orlando, what is called, rightly or wrongly, a single self, a real self."


The narrative does seem a bit disjointed at certain points, especially when Woolf foregoes conventions and goes into intricate detailing of events which seem of little importance in the greater scheme of things or inserts her witty observations on society's prejudices concerning women, chastity and more.

"Orlando, who was a passionate lover of animals, now noticed that her teeth were crooked and the two front turned inward, which, he said, is a sure sign of a perverse and cruel disposition in women, and so broke the engagement that very night for ever."

"I am she that men call Modesty. Virgin I am and ever shall be. Not for me the fruitful fields and the fertile vineyard. Increase is odious to me; and when the apples burgeon or the flocks breed, I run, I run, I let my mantle fall. My hair covers my eyes, I do not see. Spare, O spare!"

"Truth come not out from your horrid den. Hide deeper, fearful Truth. For you flaunt in the brutal gaze of the sun things that were better unknown and undone; you unveil the shameful; the dark you make clear, Hide! Hide! Hide!"


See what I mean? This is probably Woolf at her funniest and wittiest. So not a single sentence or passage can be devalued even though it may appear a little out of place or slow down the progress of the narrative.

In essence, Orlando is a summation of all the irrepressible instincts of both the man and woman - their quest for love and true wisdom, their search for meaning in chaos, their feelings of inferiority aroused by the vastness of the universe and their desire to find an eternity trapped within their brief lifetimes.
Profile Image for Dolors.
587 reviews2,710 followers
September 7, 2016
Orlando might have been devised as a mere divertimento, as a playful attempt to challenge the established views on sexuality or as a fantastical tale to confront the history of East and West by questioning the boundaries of space and time, but to this reader this novella meant much more. It meant a universe of fluctuating moods, characters and sweeping poetry that gives reason to be through the act of reading.

How to describe the nuanced melody of finely threaded irony prodigiously in tune with the most sophisticated sense of humor that entertains and prickles and urges to see the world without the limiting lenses of gender, class or social convention?
One can evolve unhindered when he suspends judgement and allows the flow of writing to give way to a solid account that sparkles because undeniable reality is better understood through the theatrical fiction of its form.

How to account for centuries expanding and contracting beyond human comprehension, decades that amount to the fall of a rose leaf on the ground, years that disappear in a flash?
The passage of time is of no consequence when love for the written word equals the all-consuming passion for the person who knows us best regardless of clothing or hair style, manners or social rituals that distract us from the true essence of our beings.

How to explain the ache spanning countless generations, eras and customs that is nestled in the heart of the artist who relishes the young, supple body, pure as driven snow; the fleeting grass under a blanket of blue or the stars reflected in pools of stagnant water both in London and Turkey?
Emily Dickinson says in her poem #466:
For Occupation 鈥� This 鈥�
The spreading wide my narrow Hands
To gather Paradise -


For Occupation 鈥� Writing 鈥�
Orlando claims a 鈥渞oom of her own鈥� to write her life, a task that will also define her love, and infuse wholeness into the swelling tides that toss her multiple beings, her male and female groundings.
The result, be it an experimental biography, an unorthodox love declaration or a thought-provoking roman 脿 clef to defy categorization at all levels, goes beyond its original purpose and becomes a fluid, ever-changing tapestry of voices answering other voices, speaking the universal language of poetry.
Profile Image for Madeline.
813 reviews47.9k followers
August 27, 2010
I finished this book about a week ago, and have been trying ever since to figure out how I'm supposed to review it. I honestly can't think of anything to say except this:

Every single emotion I've ever felt and every thought I've ever had, had already been felt and thought and written down by Virginia Woolf decades before I was even born. There is not a single concept or feeling in any of her books that isn't already intimately familiar to me. Reading her books is like having someone look into my own mind, deeper than I ever looked, and discovering something that is simultaneously unheard of and completely recognizable.
Profile Image for Fionnuala.
862 reviews
Read
February 26, 2024
I like nothing better than when two books I happen to be reading overlap, even if briefly, so I was really pleased when Virginia Woolf鈥檚 fictional character Orlando suddenly mentioned Jonathan Swift whose I鈥檝e been reading recently. Orlando, who in some sections of Woolf鈥檚 book uses the title Lady Orlando, has just been receiving a visit from Joseph Addison, Swift鈥檚 one-time bosom pal and fellow political essayist, when there's an interruption:
..and when Mr Addison has had his say, there is a terrific rap at the door, and Mr Swift, who had these arbitrary ways about him, walks in unannounced...Nothing can be plainer than that violent man. He is so coarse and yet so clean; so brutal, yet so kind; scorns the whole world, yet talks baby language to a girl, and will die, can we doubt it? in a mad house.

The 'talks baby language to a girl' remark is a direct reference to the letters Swift wrote to his young friend, Esther Johnson, whom he called Stella. Those letters have been incorporated into his which I've just been reading. Esther/Stella lived at Swift's house in Ireland with a companion, Mrs Dingley, while Swift spent time in London engaged in politics, pamphleteering, political satire, and visiting Lords and Ladies such as Orlando. Whenever Swift was in Ireland, Esther moved to lodgings nearby for the sake of propriety. There was a rumour that Swift and Esther were secretly married but it is still a rumour, three hundred years later. Esther suffered from ill health, which Swift worried about constantly, and he, though fifteen years older, outlived her by nearly twenty years, suffering from a form of what we now know as Alzheimer's in the end. So not quite, but almost, as Lady Orlando foretold.

Swift addressed the letters in the Journal to both Esther and her companion Mrs Dingley, again for the sake of propriety, although neither Esther not Swift could have envisaged them being published. That Woolf's fictional Lady Orlando knew of the contents of the letters even while Swift was writing them should not surprise us; Orlando is a most exotic creation, the ability to see the future only one more surprising trait.

But to return to that brief conversation which these two books have had: I felt that Swift should have an opportunity to comment in his turn on Lady Orlando, a kind of quid pro quo as it were, so I couldn't resist creating a semi -fictional letter from Swift鈥檚 . And it serves as a review of Woolf鈥檚 at the same time though more in satire than in conventional review form.

London, Dec. 23, 1710
I have sent my 11th letter tonight as usual and begin the dozenth.
I told you I dined at the
Lady 翱谤濒补苍诲辞鈥檚, and I will tell you no more at present, guess for why; because I am writing the text of a Proposal I mean to publish, a new theory on the problem of overpopulation and poverty. So sit still a while just by me, while I am writing, and don鈥檛 say a word, I charge you, and when I am going to bed, I will take you along, and talk a little while, so there, sit there..........................................................................
Come then, let us see what we have to say to these saucy brats, that will not let us go sleep at past eleven,
and must have news of the famous Lady Orlando. The last letter was so written over and under and sideways and crossways, that there was no room for the Lady, she being exceedingly tall and in need of more space about her than most. I had told you that Addison had made me an introduction to her before our friendship ended, indeed I met him coming out as I was going to call on her t'other day, and he never spake a word as if I was but the under-butler, and all because I've chosen a different political direction. How cross it made me! But enough of that, you know I never write politics to you. Turn over the leaf.

To return to the Lady Orlando: 'tis true as you've heard that she is curious company, but still there is in her a happy conjunction of civility, freedom, easiness, and sincerity that I have met but once before; indeed I think that the Lady Orlando and Madam Stella would go on famously together, 'tho perhaps not, and you shall tell me your impressions in your next letter, Stellakins.

What is certain, in any case, is that the Lady can talk on every subject, seemly or otherwise, and the list of her acquaintances is as long as---the last century, and maybe the next one too. 鈥楾were as if she breakfasted but yesterday with Old Bess and supped with Shakespeare the same evening. And though she simpers and smiles enough, she has a sharp eye and a sharper tongue. And when she crosses a room, she leaves a wind in her wake. If it weren鈥檛 for the simpers and the skirts, I would say I was nekatsim in the xes, and 鈥榯is a nam. There now, that鈥檚 out, enough to shock the saucy sauce boxes for a month of Satiredays.

But thinking about the Lady Orlando has set my mind, nonetheless, on the modest proposal I mentioned above, a proposal that would shew how to keep the population under better control than at present. And the meat of it would be that we breed an entire race of Orlandos as would live forever without need of further propagation. Are you bit, or are you not, sirrahs? These wo-men would be capable of switching from one sex to t鈥檕ther according as the times required - men for battle, women when we鈥檇 no need of soldiers. Nay, I hear Stella鈥檚 voice, chiding me, saying there鈥檇 be no little children in such a world. But then there鈥檇 be no lying-in, and no dying of it, and a pox of other ills besides that are not for little rogues鈥� ears, sirrahs !

And think on the accumulation of knowledge there would be in such an age, where nothing was forgotten but everything known at the same time by the same minds. For these wo-men鈥檚 minds would be all of the same cast, as I鈥檓 inclined to think they are already, though 鈥榯is little acknowledged. They鈥檇 all read Latin and Greek and all write verses as a pastime. And there would be no need for governance since they would all be equally educated and wise; what a saving in scribes and sealing wax!
So there you have it, my modest proposal, though some will say 'tis more immodest than any I鈥檝e made before!
Paaast twelve o鈥檆lock and so good-night, myownlittledearsaucyinsolentrogues.
Well, but this is a long one?
No, sirrahs, I warrant you: too long for naughty girls.
Go, sauceboxes, good-night.


鈥︹赌︹赌︹赌︹赌︹赌︹赌︹赌︹赌︹赌︹赌︹赌︹赌︹赌︹赌︹赌︹赌︹赌︹赌︹赌︹赌︹赌︹赌︹赌�
Swift did write : for preventing the children of poor people in Ireland from being a burden on their parents and the country, and for making them beneficial to the publick.
That proposal was much more outrageous than the one I've invented here!
Profile Image for Rowena.
501 reviews2,710 followers
January 11, 2013
I absolutely adored this book. The style is definitely different from the other Woolf books I've read so far. What stood out for me was the beautiful use of the language, maybe more than the story. The novel had an almost fairytale-like feel to it, and I was definitely enchanted from the start.

I don't think the following is a spoiler as it is included in the book's blurb : this book is about a 16 year old boy, Orlando, a favourite of Queen Elizabeth I, who one day wakes up to find that he has become a woman! The investigation of gender following 翱谤濒补苍诲辞鈥檚 metamorphosis is especially amazing as now it is widely accepted that gender is a societal construct. I really feel Woolf was way ahead of her time.

The book was written in an experimental biographical style, and the biographer threw in a lot of humour and wit that caused me to burst out laughing more than once. It is also satirical which I loved, especially the part where Orlando shows her calf to a sailor, who almost falls to his death!Also, the challenges and insight of writing a biography are included, things I had never really considered previously.

The book was so surreal at times especially as it wasn鈥檛 restricted by either gender or time. I feel that, as straight-forward as the story is to read, there are so many issues incorporated that I think there are also as many different approaches for reading this book.

Now I'm in the mood for more Woolf and I think a re-read of Mrs. Dalloway is in order.
Profile Image for Jill.
367 reviews360 followers
July 25, 2014
Orlando; or, The World鈥檚 Most Interesting Premise Wasted

Virginia Woolf has a wild premise for Orlando: a boy living in Elizabethan England does not die and somewhere near the middle of his life turns into a woman!

What a spectacular starting point for an author not only wanting to provide a good story but also wanting to describe the effects of time and gender on a person. Maybe Virginia Woolf did that. Other readers certainly think she did. I do not, however. Orlando is the huge waste of a premise.

I鈥檓 not sure what I鈥檓 supposed to take from this reading experience. Its most salient point was the immutability of the human spirit regardless of sex. For although Orlando must change her outward behavior to align with societal attitudes concerning gender, he/she remains steady throughout the text, mainly through his/her devotion to writing. I suppose I don鈥檛 find this point really profound. It鈥檚 been said before and it鈥檚 been said better.

My main problem, though, is the writing. I鈥檝e read some of Woolf鈥檚 essays and short stories before and was impressed by her prose. In Orlando her writing choices confused me. Her prose lacks any emotion. I read this entire book utterly dispassionate to what was unfolding on the pages before me. For me, it read cold and surgical. It lacked any life. This detachment is exacerbated by the character of Orlando who is very aloof. Who is Orlando? Why should I care about her? Even when events upset Orlando鈥攚hen the Russian princess leaves, when the critic insults his poem, when her lands and title are stripped from her鈥攈e/she continues on like before. Woolf might say, 鈥淥rlando was devastated,鈥� but not once did I feel any of 翱谤濒补苍诲辞鈥檚 feelings.

It reminded me of reading a lab report. 鈥淥bserve closely as our specimen, Orlando, male and aged 16, sits beneath the oak tree. [Six paragraphs of description about his surrounding environment] Now watch as he goes to the Queen鈥檚 Court [Nine paragraphs of description about his surrounding environment]鈥ow observe as he transforms into a woman [Sixty two paragraphs about 17th Century London]鈥� And on and on.

Obviously I鈥檓 an outlier here. Most people are moved by Woolf鈥檚 writing and challenged by 翱谤濒补苍诲辞鈥檚 metamorphosis. In my goodreads profile under 鈥渇avorite books鈥� I have written: a book that 1. makes me think 2. features a gripping story. Usually but not always in that order.

If I finish a book that accomplishes none of the above, I will be very unhappy. I just finished Orlando and I鈥檓 feeling very unhappy.
Profile Image for James.
475 reviews
January 27, 2018
Having read and not enjoyed or appreciated Virginia Woolf鈥檚 鈥楾o The Lighthouse鈥� (1927) it was with expectation, due to it鈥檚 literary reputation, although some trepidation, due to my experience with 鈥楲ighthouse鈥�, that I approached the markedly different 鈥極rlando 鈥� A Biography鈥� (1928).

The premise of the life of Orlando was always going to be a highly promising one 鈥� beginning as it does with Orlando as a boy at the time of Queen Elizabeth I and following his adventures across different lands, and life of over more than 300 years, during the course of which he awakens one day to find himself now having become a woman and ending in the year of publication 1928 鈥� significantly the year of suffrage for women in the UK. This novel/quasi biography is also seen as Woolf鈥檚 long and beautiful love letter to Vita Sackville-West (photographs of whom, as Orlando are included).

鈥極rlando鈥� raises, discusses and alludes to some highly important issues and especially considering the time of publication, has since quite rightly become an iconic feminist and transgender classic. Woolf is concerned here with gender politics, sexual stereotyping, gender identity, the institution of marriage, the subjugation of women, androgyny, sexual ambiguity, the restrictive and controlling nature of women鈥檚 clothing as well as the premise of primogeniture and much more.

Woolf writes interestingly about life as very much a journey, the passing of time 鈥� the way that time passes in different ways, how each of us individually are different people at different times of our lives and live many lives in one 鈥� whilst also talking of having a 鈥榦ne true controlling self鈥�. In some ways 鈥極rlando鈥� could also perhaps be interpreted as in some sense a ghost story, a travel through time as well as time travelling perhaps?

As with 鈥楲ighthouse鈥� though, 鈥極rlando鈥� is a book that I wanted to and had hoped to like 鈥� but sadly that wasn鈥檛 quite the case. Despite its relatively short length, it still felt like a long novel, its stream of consciousness style of delivery (paragraphs often running for at least the length of a page). Whilst viewed by many as beautifully written bravura writing, for me that wasn鈥檛 so. Whilst it may seem sacrilege to those who appreciate 鈥極rlando鈥� and the writing Woolf to say so 鈥� despite its brevity, 鈥極rlando鈥� feels overlong and perhaps would have benefitted from some significant editing.

I found 鈥極rlando鈥� ultimately to be often wilfully obscure, self-indulgent and esoteric 鈥� its meaning sometimes shrouded in a mist of overt intellectualism and flights of fancy, rendering it often meaningless and impenetrable.

鈥極rlando鈥� then is a book which is hugely important and influential (politically and culturally) in terms of its story and the issues it raises 鈥� ground breaking as it must have been in 1928. Sadly it now also feels very much a novel which is of its time and a product very much of the overt intellectualism of the Woolf and the Bloomsbury Group.

In summation 鈥� an important, ground breaking, worthy, thought provoking, sporadically compelling and influential novel, but paradoxically one which is self-indulgent, esoteric, often impenetrable and ultimately unsatisfying. There's much to like, but not enough.
Profile Image for Fernando.
718 reviews1,067 followers
February 19, 2024
鈥淏i贸logos y psic贸logos resolver谩n. B谩stenos formular el hecho directo: Orlando fue var贸n hasta los treinta a帽os; entonces se volvi贸 mujer y ha seguido si茅ndolo.鈥�

Hac铆a tiempo (a帽os) que quer铆a volver a leer una novela de la inolvidable Virginia Woolf, esta excepcional escritora que form贸 parte de esa tendencia cultural que fue el 鈥淕rupo de Bloomsbury鈥� junto a su marido Leonard Woolf y escritores de la talla de Bertrand Russel o Ludwig Wittgenstein a principio de la d茅cada de 1920.
Su extraordinaria, envolvente y po茅tica prosa destaca primordialmente en libros como 鈥淎l faro鈥� o 鈥淟as olas鈥� con sus interludios de monologo interior que difieren de los de James Joyce ya que son fluidos y ordenados, pero eso es tema de esas novelas precisamente.
鈥淥rlando鈥� es una novela de concepci贸n fant谩stica que podr铆amos relacionar con cuentos como 鈥淓l extra帽o caso de Benjamin Button鈥� de Francis Scott FitzGerald o 鈥淩ip Van Winkle鈥� de Washington Irving.
Por qu茅 afirmo esto, bueno, porque precisamente Woolf nos narra la vida de un noble llamado Orlando cuya caracter铆stica principal es que su vida atraviesa cuatro siglos: comienza cont谩ndonos su vida en el a帽o 1586, o sea, al final del siglo XVII atravesando el XVIII, el XIX y los comienzos del siglo XX culminando la novela exactamente el jueves once de octubre de 1928 y lo m谩s notable a煤n es que en los 342 a帽os que han pasado de principio a final, Orlando solo tiene 36 a帽os de vida y a finales del siglo XVII al XVIII ha cambiado de sexo, de var贸n a mujer.
Durante todo este trayecto el personaje vivir谩 toda una suerte de circunstancias en su longeva existencia: atravesar谩 experiencias amorosas de todos los tipos, heterosexuales y homosexuales (principalmente el lesbianismo, dado que Woolf desaf铆a a los lectores de su 茅poca con sus propias experiencias vividas junto a su gran amante, que se llam贸 Vita Sackville-West y que inspiraron esta novela).
Woolf se las ingenia para contarnos a nosotros los lectores las formas de pensar, sentir y amar tanto del lado masculino como del femenino agregando a todo esto una impresionante descripci贸n paso del tiempo
Para ser sincero, 鈥淥rlando鈥� es una perfecta combinaci贸n de la narrativa verborr谩gica de Garc铆a M谩rquez en 锟斤拷锟紺ien a帽os de soledad鈥�, el perfecto revisionismo hist贸rico de V铆ctor Hugo junto con las frases m谩s mordaces e ir贸nicas de Oscar Wilde y hasta la irreverencia que destac贸 a Jonathan Swift.
Por 煤ltimo, cabe destacar la impecable traducci贸n que trae mi edici贸n hecha por Jorge Luis Borges (la inglesa era su literatura preferida) lo que hace la lectura m谩s rica, v铆vida e intensa.
He terminado de leer 鈥淥rlando鈥� con gran satisfacci贸n. Ahora y como es l贸gico, continuar茅 leyendo otra de sus novelas capitales: 鈥淢rs. Dalloway鈥�.
Profile Image for Paromjit.
3,080 reviews26k followers
October 5, 2020
A fascinating and engaging reread.
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