âI put off <i>To the Lighthouse </i>for a long time, in order to live in delicious anticipation of it. . . . Yet this pleasure can be drawn out for only so long; if you are a reader, the morning comes when you must greet it along with the sun. . . . There is never the sense, opening <i>To the Lighthouse</i>, that it could have been anything else. It opens with the weather, just like the real day. It rises to some occasion, wakes with the lark to meet the weekendâmoves âwith an indescribable air of expectation,â because it is going to meet someone around the corner, and with the shock of encounter you sometimes feel in reading, you find that it is you.â â<b>Patricia Lockwood, from the Foreword</b><br /> <br />âI reread this book every once in a while, and every time I do I find it more capacious and startling. Itâs so revolutionary and so exquisitely wrought that it keeps evolving on its own somehow, as if itâs alive.â â<b>Alison Bechdel</b><br /> <br />âI know of no more gut-wrenching, soaring prose about shared consciousness, mortality and water. Truly a book for the cradle to the grave.â â<b>Maggie Nelson</b><br /> <br />âThis novel is just astonishing in its depth and reach and beauty. There is really nothing else like it, and no matter how many times I read it I find myself shocked at what Woolf was able to do.â â<b>Meg Wolitzer</b><br /> <br />âA classic for a reason. My mind was warped into a new shape by her prose and it will never be the same again.â â<b>Greta Gerwig</b><br /> <br />âMy admiration for this book is complete. It is as beautiful, poignant, and ruthless as anything I have ever read.â â<b>Siri Hustvedt</b><br /> <br />âWoolfâs groundbreaking novel is still one of the best available accounts of self-mythologizing middle-class family life and its oppressive construction of male and female identity.â â<b>Rachel Cusk</b><br /> <br />âOne of the greatest elegies in the English language, a book which transcends time.â â<b>Margaret Drabble</b><br /> <br />âWithout question one of the two or three finest novels of the twentieth century. Woolf comments on the most pressing dramas of our human predicament: war, mortality, family, love. If youâre like me youâll come back to this book often, always astounded, always moved, always refreshed.â â<b>Rick Moody</b><br /> <br />âShe was doing with language something like what Jimi Hendrix does with a guitar.â â<b>Michael Cunningham</b><br /> <br />âRadiant . . . I think that beyond being about the very nature of reality, it is itself a vision of reality.â â<b>Eudora Welty</b><br /> <br />âThrillingly introspective.â â<i><b>The Independent</b></i><br /> <br />âAt the head of all Virginia Woolfâs work.â â<i><b>The New York Times</b></i>