A new look at an iconic writer, a racist empire, and a diverse city, brought uncomfortably together by a bold trick on the Royal Navy.

 

. . .

In February 1910, Virginia Woolf joined an outrageous hoax on the British Navy. Blackening her face with greasepaint, she masqueraded as an African prince and conned her way onto the decks of the most famous battleship of the day, the H.M.S. Dreadnought. The stunt sparked a global sensation. It made headlines around the world for weeks, embarrassed the Royal Navy, and even provoked heated discussions in parliament.  

But who was the “girl prince,” and what was she doing there?

The Girl Prince
Danell
the girl prince danell jones

LATEST BOOK

The Girl Prince:
Virginia Woolf, Race, and
The Dreadnought Hoax

R E A D  M O R E

LATEST BLOG

Read More

The Girl Prince
The Virginia Woolf Writers' Workshop
Whimsical Muse
The Girl Prince
The Virginia Woolf Writers' Workshop
Whimsical Muse
The Girl Prince
The Virginia Woolf Writers' Workshop
Whimsical Muse

Latest Blogs

And the Winner Is…

Last Saturday night, I was sitting in one of the galleries at the Yellowstone Art Museum. The giant hall was filled with people clustered around banquet tables, stacks of new books tumbling over bright white tablecloths, wine-glasses half-filled, happy...

read more