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With an Introduction and Notes by Professor Stephen Arkin, San
Francisco State University. Katherine Mansfield is widely regarded
as a writer who helped create the modern short story. Born in
Wellington, New Zealand in 1888, she came to London in 1903 to
attend Queen's College and returned permanently in 1908. her first
book of stories, In a German Pension, appeared in 1911, and she
went on to write and publish an extraordinary body of work. This
edition of The Collected Stories brings together all of the stories
that Mansfield had written up until her death in January of 1923.
With an introduction and head-notes, this volume allows the reader
to become familiar with the complete range of Mansfield's work from
the early, satirical stories set in Bavaria, through the luminous
recollections of her childhood in New Zealand, and through the
mature, deeply felt stories of her last years. Admired by Virginia
Woolf in her lifetime and by many writers since her death,
Katherine Mansfield is one of the great literary artists of the
twentieth century.
Introduction and Notes by Professor Stephen Arkin, San Francisco
University. 'Young women who have no economic or political power
must attend to the serious business of contriving material
security'. Jane Austen's sardonic humour lays bare the stratagems,
the hypocrisy and the poignancy inherent in the struggle of two
very different sisters to achieve respectability. Sense and
Sensibility is a delightful comedy of manners in which the sisters
Elinor and Marianne represent these two qualities. Elinor's
character is one of Augustan detachment, while Marianne, a fervent
disciple of the Romantic Age, learns to curb her passionate nature
in the interests of survival. This book, the first of Austen's
novels to be published, remains as fresh a cautionary tale today as
it ever was.
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