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Katherine Mansfield

by Joanna FitzPatrick

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"Katherine Mansfield is a powerfully understated fictional narrative of an author who was determined to make her way - and her mark - in London's early 20th century literary society. A foreigner from New Zealand, Mansfield was never welcomed into the famed Bloomsbury Group, yet she was respected - even revered - by Virginia Woolf, who admitted Mansfield was the only writer who made her jealous"--Back cover.… (more)
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"Katherine Mansfield is a powerfully understated fictional narrative of an author who was determined to make her way - and her mark - in London's early 20th century literary society. A foreigner from New Zealand, Mansfield was never welcomed into the famed Bloomsbury Group, yet she was respected - even revered - by Virginia Woolf, who admitted Mansfield was the only writer who made her jealous"--Back cover.

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"Here then is a little summary of what I need – power, wealth and freedom," wrote the eighteen-year-old Katherine Mansfield in May 1908, already determined to make her way—and her mark—in London’s early 20th century literary salons.

An immigrant from New Zealand, the little Colonialist was never accepted into the famed Bloomsbury Group, yet she was respected—even revered—by Virginia Woolf; their historic literary friendship one of mutual admiration and fascination shot through with wary misunderstandings, rivalry and envy.

Katherine's upward spiraling success as a published writer comes to a skidding halt when, on her thirtieth birthday, her pulmonary specialist orders her to stop writing, move to a tuberculosis sanatorium, and die peacefully. Her heroic response was to go into battle and fight her bacterial enemies who have infiltrated her young body, sapped her energy, derailed her marriage, and forced her into dependency on LM, her devoted caregiver.

Often alone, or accompanied by LM, or occasionally by her husband, John Murry, Mansfield goes on an extended road trip as a wandering consumptive. She travels from London to Paris, then south to the French Riviera, and then high into the Alps in pursuit of a cure for her debilitating disease, her withering soul, and her next inventive short story.

In the autumn of 1922, she arrives at her final home, G.I. Gurdjieff's Institute for Harmonious Development of Man in Fontainebleau, where she achieves her dying wish: I want to be all that I am capable of becoming so that I may be a child of the sun.
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