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A poetic novel that begins with six children playing in a garden by the sea and follows their lives as they grow up and experience friendship love and grief at the death of their beloved friend Percival.|Virginia Woolf was born in London in 1882. After her father's death in 1904 Virginia and her sister the painter Vanessa Bell moved to Bloomsbury and became the centre of ‘The Bloomsbury Group’. This informal collective of artists and writers exerted a powerful influence over early twentieth-century British culture. In 1912 Virginia married Leonard Woolf a writer and social reformer. Three years later her first novel The Voyage Out was published followed by Night and Day (1919) and Jacob's Room (1922). Between 1925 and 1931 Virginia Woolf produced what are now regarded as her finest masterpieces from Mrs Dalloway (1925) to The Waves (1931). She also maintained an astonishing output of literary criticism short fiction journalism and biography. On 28 March 1941 a few months before the publication of her final novel Between the Acts Virginia Woolf committed suicide.|Clear bright burnished at once marvellously accurate and subtly connotative. The pure delicate sensibility found in this language and the moods that it expresses are a true kind of poetry|As a reader as a writer I constantly return for the lyricism of it the melancholy the humanity|It is so different from any other novel I have read that description is pointless. Suffice to say that it creates an entirely new way of writing about what goes on in the human mind and how those minds interact with one another|Virginia Woolf wanted to write about the vast unknown uncertain continent that is the world and us in it' Jeanette Winterson from her introduction to The Waves The Waves is an astonishingly beautiful and poetic novel. It begins with six children playing in a garden by the sea and follows their lives as they grow up and experience friendship love and grief at the death of their beloved friend Percival. Weaving together soliloquies from the novel's six characters Woolf delicately and expertly explores universal concepts such as individuality the self and community. A novel still as poignant today as it was when written. Regarded by many as her greatest work The Waves is also seen as Virginia Woolf's response to the loss of her brother Thoby who died when he was twenty-six.