The Garden Party and Other Stories, Katherine Mansfield
The Garden Party and Other Stories, Katherine Mansfield
List: $16.95 | Sale: $11.87
Club: $8.47

The Garden Party and Other Stories

Author: Katherine Mansfield

Narrator: Marguerite Gavin

Unabridged: 6 hr 42 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 08/12/2008

Categories: Fiction, Classic


Synopsis

The fifteen stories collected in this volume demonstrate the genius of a woman who, in her own short lifetime, was compared to Chekhov. The tales are sensitive revelations of human behavior in ordinary situations. With careful, quiet observation, Mansfield illuminates complicated relationships and profound, often troubling ideas. Her stories often feature young women in the process of maturity, confronting for the first time some of the realities of life. In the title story, a young womans garden party coincides with the death of a workingclass neighbor, bringing a brush of mortality and realism into her carefully constructed plans and ideals. Her difficulty in fully realizing the seriousness of the event is typical of Mansfield's ironic world.

About Katherine Mansfield

Katherine Mansfield (1888–1923) was born in Wellington, New Zealand, and settled in Europe to finish her education. She published her first short fiction in The New Age, then in Rhythm, whose editor, the British writer and critic John Middleton Murry, she soon married. Her writing contributed to the development of the stream of consciousness technique and to the modernist use of multiple viewpoints, and her style has had a powerful influence on subsequent writers in the same genre.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Violet

Piazza del Duomo is my least favourite place in Florence. I always hurry through it. Probably San Marco (except at four in the morning) and St Peters are my least favourite places in, respectively, Venice and Rome so I guess I just don’t respond very well to the grandiose. I prefer what’s smaller, m......more

Goodreads review by Georgia

If there was just one sentence I could save from a fire, it would be this one from The Garden Party: "And the perfect afternoon slowly ripened, slowly faded, slowly its petals closed." Here is life in all its order. Rhythmic in sound and symbol, hushed as a prayer. Read it again out loud. Though "lo......more