New Zealand Stories

Front Cover
Oxford University Press, 1997 - Fiction - 295 pages
Katherine Mansfield is New Zealand's most celebrated writer, and one of the key figures in the history of the short story in English. This is the first time the stories set in her own country have been brought together and published in the order in which she wrote them. The Mansfield that emerges from this fresh perspective is both familiar and unexpected.

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Contents

INTRODUCTION
1
In the Botanical Gardens 1907
18
LoveLiesBleeding 1911
32
Copyright

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About the author (1997)

Katherine Mansfield was born Katherine Beauchamp in Wellington, New Zealand on October 14, 1888, the third daughter of a prominent banker. She attended the Wellington College for Girls before entering Queen's College in London in 1903. Her interest in the cello led to lessons at the Royal Academy of Music, where she became secretly engaged to a young prodigy named Arnold Trowell, who already had a successful concert career. Upon being summoned back to New Zealand by her father in 1906, she decided to abandon music in favor of writing. She soon had three stories published in a Melbourne monthly and gained her father's consent to return to England. Once there, she became depressed when she found that Trowell no longer loved her, and she rushed into a hasty marriage to a young musician, only to leave him a few days later. She had a miscarriage, which marked the beginning of her decline in health. After returning to England in 1910, Katherine Beauchamp published her work under the name Katherine Mansfield. A collection of her stories, "In a German Pension," was published in 1911. A year later, she met John Middleton Murry, who eventually became her second husband when she was finally able to secure a divorce. By the time of this marriage in 1918, Mansfield was found to have tuberculosis. Her ill health, combined with the death of her brother in World War I, turned the focus of her work inward and on her homeland. Her memoirs, collected in a book entitled "Bliss," secured her reputation as a writer, and she followed it up with the equally acclaimed "Garden Party and Other Stories." Her lyrical style and stream of consciousness method placed her along side James Joyce and Virginia Woolf for her strength of characterization and her subtlety of detail. Katherine Mansfield died on January 9, 1923 at the Gurdjieff Institute for the Harmonic Development of Man at Fontainebleau. Vincent Gerald O'sullivan was born on September 28, 1937 in New Zealand. He is a poet, short story writer, novelist, editor, and playwright. He was chosen the New Zealand Poet Laureate for the term 2013-2015. He attended Grey Lynn and Sacred Heart College. He graduated from the University of Auckland aand Oxford University. He then went on to lecture at Victoria University of Wellington and the University of Waikato. His poetry titles include Our Burning Time, Bearings, Butcher and Co., and The Pilate Tapes. His short stories include: The Boy, The Bridge, The River; Survivals, and Palms and Minarets: Selected Stories. In 2015 his work, Grahame Syndney Paintings 1974-2014, made The New Zealand Best Seller List.

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