Stories

Although Katherine Mansfield was closely associated with D.H. Lawrence and something of a rival of Virginia Woolf, her stories suggest someone writing in a different era and in a vastly different English. Her language is as transparent as clean glass, yet hovers on the edge of poetry. Her characters are passionate men and women swaddled in English reserve -- and sometimes briefly breaking through. And her genius is to pinpoint those unacknowledged and almost imperceptible moments in which those people's relationships -- with one another and themselves -- change forever. This collection includes such masterpieces as "Prelude," "At the Bay" "Bliss," "The Man Without a Temperament" and "The Garden Party" and has a new introduction by Jeffrey Meyers.
"We to her the prosperity of the 'free' story: she untrammeled it from conventions and, still more, gained for it a prestige till then unthought of. How much ground Katherine Mansfield broke for her successors may not be realized. Her imagination kindled unlikely matter; she was to alter for good and all our idea of what goes to make a story." -- Elizabeth Bowen
Born in New Zealand in 1888, Katherine Mansfield Beauchamp was primarily a writer of short stories. She published Prelude and The Garden Party and Other Stories before her premature death from TB in 1923. Something Childish and her journal and letters were published posthumously. View titles by Katherine Mansfield
"Prelude"
"At the Bay"
"Bliss"
"The Man Without a Temperament"
"The Tiredness of Rosabel"
"The Baron"
"The Modern Soul"
"The Woman and the Store"
"Ole Underwood"
"The Little Governess"
"Psychology"
"Je ne Parle pas Français"
"Sun and Moon"
"This Flower"
"Revelations"
"The Young Girl"
"The Stranger"
"The Daughters of the Late Colonel"
"Life of Ma Parker"
"The Singing Lesson"
"The Voyage"
"Miss Brill"
"Marriage a la Mode"
"The Doll's House"
"The Dove's Nest"
"Six Years After"
"The Fly"
"The Garden Party"

About

Although Katherine Mansfield was closely associated with D.H. Lawrence and something of a rival of Virginia Woolf, her stories suggest someone writing in a different era and in a vastly different English. Her language is as transparent as clean glass, yet hovers on the edge of poetry. Her characters are passionate men and women swaddled in English reserve -- and sometimes briefly breaking through. And her genius is to pinpoint those unacknowledged and almost imperceptible moments in which those people's relationships -- with one another and themselves -- change forever. This collection includes such masterpieces as "Prelude," "At the Bay" "Bliss," "The Man Without a Temperament" and "The Garden Party" and has a new introduction by Jeffrey Meyers.

Reviews

"We to her the prosperity of the 'free' story: she untrammeled it from conventions and, still more, gained for it a prestige till then unthought of. How much ground Katherine Mansfield broke for her successors may not be realized. Her imagination kindled unlikely matter; she was to alter for good and all our idea of what goes to make a story." -- Elizabeth Bowen

Author

Born in New Zealand in 1888, Katherine Mansfield Beauchamp was primarily a writer of short stories. She published Prelude and The Garden Party and Other Stories before her premature death from TB in 1923. Something Childish and her journal and letters were published posthumously. View titles by Katherine Mansfield

Table of Contents

"Prelude"
"At the Bay"
"Bliss"
"The Man Without a Temperament"
"The Tiredness of Rosabel"
"The Baron"
"The Modern Soul"
"The Woman and the Store"
"Ole Underwood"
"The Little Governess"
"Psychology"
"Je ne Parle pas Français"
"Sun and Moon"
"This Flower"
"Revelations"
"The Young Girl"
"The Stranger"
"The Daughters of the Late Colonel"
"Life of Ma Parker"
"The Singing Lesson"
"The Voyage"
"Miss Brill"
"Marriage a la Mode"
"The Doll's House"
"The Dove's Nest"
"Six Years After"
"The Fly"
"The Garden Party"