Vol. 47 No. 1 1980 - page 2

Virginia Woolf
MICHAEL ROSENTHAL.
Examining all Woolf's fiction-including such
important novels as Mrs. Oal/oway, To the Lighthouse, The Waves, and The
Years-as well as many of her essays and critical works, Michael Rosenthal
argues that Woolf's preoccupation with form was both her overriding ar–
tistic concern and the source of her greatest accomplishment. An "attentive
and admiring survey of her novels."-New York Times Book Review.
272 pages, $15.00
SOlDbraventadora
Shadowinnower
AGUEDA PIZARRO, TRANSLATED WITH THE AUTHOR BY BARBARA
STOLER MILLER.
This bilingual collection of poems by a Columbian
poet chronicles in a rich, surrealistic voice the beauty, violence, and seren–
ity of a woman's travels about the earth and through interior solitude. The
first collection of Pizarro's poems to be published in the United States,
Sombraventadora/Shadowinnower introduces the English-speaking
reader to a poetry in which, in the words of Jorge Guillen, "everything flows,
evident, profound, true."
128 pages, $10.00 cloth, $4.95 paper
Metafictional Characters
in Modern DralDa
JUNE SCHLUETER.
"Schlueter chronologically examines the the theme
of double exposure and double consciousness in Pirandello, Genet,
Beckett, Weiss, Albee, Stoppard, and Handke. Her book is so well prepared
that it is a pleasure to swallow. The author, to use theater talk, 'does nice
work."'-Library Journal
143 pages, $15.00
To order send check or money order (including $1 .30 per order for postage and
handling) to Dept.
IN
at the address below.
COLUMBIA
UNIVERSITY PRESS
136 South Broadway, Irvington, New Yortt 10533
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