<div dir="ltr">Hi, if any of you will be in Durham, North Carolina next week, I'm giving a talk on the VW writing desk they have acquired.  Here is the blurb.  The talk will be March 3, details in the blurb.<div><br><div><a href="https://blogs.library.duke.edu/rubenstein/2016/02/18/virginia-woolf-writing-surfaces-and-writing-depths-march-3/" target="_blank" style="font-size:13px">https://blogs.library.duke.edu/rubenstein/2016/02/18/virginia-woolf-writing-surfaces-and-writing-depths-march-3/</a><br></div><div><br></div><div>Happy spring break! leslie<br clear="all"><div><br></div>-- <br><div class="gmail_signature"><div dir="ltr"><font color="#9900ff" face="garamond, serif">Leslie Kathleen Hankins</font><div><font color="#9900ff" face="garamond, serif">Professor</font></div><div><font color="#9900ff" face="garamond, serif">Department of English & Creative Writing</font></div><div><font color="#9900ff" face="garamond, serif"><br></font></div><div><font color="#9900ff" face="garamond, serif" size="2"><i>"Moreover, however interesting facts may be, they are an inferior form of fiction, & gradually we become impatient of their weakness & diffuseness, of their compromises & evasions, of the slovenly sentences which they make for themselves, and are eager to revive ourselves with the greater intensity & truth of fiction." </i> </font></div><div><font color="#9900ff" face="garamond, serif">                                                         Virginia Woolf, "How Should One Read a Book?"</font></div></div></div>
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