
Night and Day is Virginia Woolf's second novel, a social and psychological study of love, marriage, work, and women's independence in Edwardian London. Katharine Hilbery, Mary Datchet, Ralph Denham, and William Rodney move through courtship, family expectation, suffrage work, and private uncertainty. Woolf uses a more traditional form than her later modernist novels while already probing consciousness and choice.
The book is valuable because it shows Woolf between Victorian inheritance and modern experiment. Its conversations about marriage, intellectual life, female vocation, and emotional honesty are quieter than in Mrs Dalloway or To the Lighthouse, but deeply revealing. Readers interested in Woolf's development, women's lives, London fiction, and early modernism will find a thoughtful transitional novel.
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