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At the age of 59, he died on March 28, 1941 due to the severe depression he suffered from.
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-''Mrs. Dalloway'' (1925)
- ''To the lighthouse'' (1927)
- ''Orlando'' (1928)
- ''A room of one's own'' (1929)
- ''The waves'' (1931)
- ''The years'' (1937)
- ''Three guineas'' (1938) -
The first novel: Hogarth Press, and began a literary style
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In 1917 she married a man named Leonard Woolf, with who five years later they founded the famous publishing house Hogarth Press, which would publish the work of Virginia herself and that of many other relevant writers.
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"Night and day", a romantic novel
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His first work in the literature was a play entitled Melymbrosia, in 1908. This work was the basis for his first novel, published in 1915 (when she was already 37 years old) under the title end of the trip
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A few years later, with other brothers, he moved to Bloomsbury, where he began to write regular articles and reviews for The Guardian newspaper and for The Times literary supplement. She was also invited to teach at Morley College, a school for working-class, where she sporadically taught English literature and history.
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At the age of 13, Virginia suffered from depression over the death of her mother, stepsister, and father.
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In his childhood, he had two brothers and three half-siblings. She suffered sexual abuse by two of them. At the age of 12 she lived in Porthmister and at Godrevvy Lighthouse, where she collected her first literary memories of landscapes and characters.
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At the age of nine, he created a kind of newspaper
family called: The Hyde Park Gate News. -
Virginia Woolf was born on January 25, 1882 in Kenkiston (London).