Three stories by Virginia Woolf are what compose this book and show what she liked to call moments of existence. In them, characters and actions are subject to poetic images, away from the banalities of life.
In "Kew Gardens" set in the fabulous botanical garden of London, he introduces us, as T. S. Eliott would say, in "a lot of broken images" that go from the lazy movement of a snail to the conversations of walkers in the garden.
In "A Haunted House," first published in the anthology Monday or Tuesday, he rewrites a traditional ghost story. A couple receives the visit of some specters that put in evidence the world of the superficial.
In the third story, "The mark on the wall", uses the monologue written in the first person to make us fly from one memory to another, originating from the mark on the wall of his room.
Accompany these magnificent stories with th...read more