To the River: A Journey Beneath the Surface by Olivia Laing

  • Year2019
  • LanguageRussian
  • Edition3000
  • Pages292
  • BindingPaperback
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Garage publishing program in collaboration with Ad Marginem Press

A dedication to Virginia Woolf, one of the author Olivia Laing’s idols.

Walking along the river Ouse in Sussex where Virginia Woolf drowned herself in 1941, British writer and literary critic Olivia Laing explores the relationship between history and landscape and studies the role of rivers in human life. Ultimately, all roads lead the author to the Ouse, as her route ends there, where her story begins.

On the shores of the Ouse, Laing reflects on very different subjects—from the violent Barons’ War of the thirteenth century to the Great Dinosaur Rush of the nineteenth. She remembers Shakespeare, Homer, Iris Murdoch, and Kenneth Grahame, the author of the “riverside” classic The Wind in the Willows, analyzing the river metaphor in literature and mythology in the process. Laing’s central subject of study however remains Virginia Woolf, her permanent fellow traveler during this journey. This is why the book can be also read as a biography of the famous English writer, or a monument commemorating the fluidity of Woolf’s life and literary practice: “…for though she eventually foundered for a time it seemed she possessed, like some freedivers, a gift for descending beneath the surface of the world”.

Author

Olivia Laing (b. 1977) is a British writer and critic, regular culture contributor to The GuardianNew Statesman, and Frieze. She is the author of The Lonely City: Adventures in the Art of Being Alone, 2016 (translated to Russian as part of Garage’s joint publishing program with Ad Marginem Press), and The Trip to Echo Spring: On Writers and Drinking, 2013

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