Far from the lady in the modernist ivory tower, Virginia Woolf was very
comfortable with the commercial side of the literary world . Virginia
Woolf and the Literary Marketplace is an exciting collection of fifteen
new essays, by both renowned and up-and-coming scholars, exploring the
many roles Woolf played in the world of commodity culture. As these
contributors show, even after she became famous for her fiction, Woolf
continued to engage with the market in its manifold facets, including
marketing, production, pricing, copyright, technology, readership,
reviews, and more.