At the Bay

Author(s): Katherine Mansfield

Classics

This dreamy, formally audacious story of a summer's day in the life of one family is a small masterpiece by Katherine Mansfield, hailed by Lorna Sage as 'one of the great modernist writers'.

General Information

  • : 9781612195834
  • : Melville House Publishing
  • : Melville House Publishing
  • : 0.367
  • : 30 November 2016
  • : 178mm X 127mm
  • : United States
  • : books

Other Specifications

  • : Katherine Mansfield
  • : Paperback
  • : English
  • : 823.914
  • : 64
  • : FC

More About The Product

"The only writing I have ever been jealous of." --Virginia Woolf "By the time of her death in 1923, at age 34, she was being acclaimed as one of the few truly outstanding short-story writers in English, and with minor fluctuations her reputation has held firm ever since." --The New York Times "A courageous, reckless character--by turns precociously sensual, cynical, and childish . . . There are stories of hers that last, because they have her sting, delicacy, and wit." --V.S. Pritchett, The New Yorker "[Mansfield has brought] her inventions right over the threshold of art. They are extraordinarily solid; they have lived so long in her mind that she knows all about them and can ransack them for the difficult, rare, essential points." --Rebecca West

Katherine Mansfield was born in Wellington, New Zealand, in 1888. She moved to London in 1903, to attend college, and settled there in 1908. In 1910, she began to contribute articles to The New Age, and the following year, she published her first collection, In a German Pension. Mansfield was close to a number of her fellow modernists, including D. H. Lawrence and Virginia Woolf. Her second book of stories, Bliss, was published in 1921, and her third, The Garden Party, appeared a year later. It was the last book to be published in her lifetime: after contracting tuberculosis in 1917, she died six years later, in 1923.