Glowing with life
New Zealand Listener|February 25-March 3 2023
A hundred years after her death, Katherine Mansfield’s short stories are still as vivid and immediate as when they were first penned.
KIRSTY GUNN
Glowing with life

When does a writer first start thinking about writing? Thinking, not about what to write - all those stories or poems or novels and what might happen in them- but, thinking, rather, how to go about it. When does she start thinking, this writer, about the writing itself?

For Katherine Mansfield, the Wellington-born short-story writer, it was early enough: "This style of work absorbs me," she wrote, when still a girl, to an Australian magazine that was publishing vignettes she'd developed from earlier pieces and which already showed her visionary bringing together, in prose, of seeing and sense. Here was someone who knew exactly what words could do, how they could bring life, as it were, to life. No matter what her subject, whether it was a doll's house or an apple, Mansfield wanted to forge the kind of sentence that would transcribe it fully, wondrously to the page as something vital and necessary.

"Do you, too, feel an infinite delight and value in detail," she wrote to her dear friend, the Ukrainian translator Samuel Koteliansky, in 1915,"not for the sake of detail but for the life in the life of it."

Esta historia es de la edición February 25-March 3 2023 de New Zealand Listener.

Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 8500 revistas y periódicos.

Esta historia es de la edición February 25-March 3 2023 de New Zealand Listener.

Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 8500 revistas y periódicos.

MÁS HISTORIAS DE NEW ZEALAND LISTENERVer todo
A big noise
New Zealand Listener

A big noise

Scott Kara pays tribute to alternative rock figurehead Steve Albini.

time-read
3 minutos  |
May 25-31 2024
Fiddling on the roof
New Zealand Listener

Fiddling on the roof

After the doco recut by Peter Jackson, the original Let It Be returns as odd as ever.

time-read
2 minutos  |
May 25-31 2024
Get with the pilgrim
New Zealand Listener

Get with the pilgrim

Australian film-maker Bill Bennett thought turning his Camino de Santiago experience into a movie would be a good walk ruined. But he did it anyway.

time-read
2 minutos  |
May 25-31 2024
The real queen of Bridgerton
New Zealand Listener

The real queen of Bridgerton

Regency women would have a ball if they were transported from 'the Ton' to the present day, author Julia Quinn says.

time-read
6 minutos  |
May 25-31 2024
Setting boundaries
New Zealand Listener

Setting boundaries

A giant in the philosophy of gender seems unwilling to engage with alternative points of view or the reality of biological sex.

time-read
4 minutos  |
May 25-31 2024
Affair of the heart
New Zealand Listener

Affair of the heart

Miranda July's second novel, a wild ride through an unconventional relationship, is not for the faint-hearted.

time-read
2 minutos  |
May 25-31 2024
A continent of no laws
New Zealand Listener

A continent of no laws

A Kiwi investigative journalist has spent 21 years trying to get to the bottom of what many believe is the suspicious death of an Australian scientist in Antarctica.

time-read
6 minutos  |
May 25-31 2024
I'm Jo Peck again
New Zealand Listener

I'm Jo Peck again

Four weeks after her 60th birthday, Jo Peck's husband of 25 years told her he was seeing someone else. In a new book, she details how shock and disbelief made way for happiness and contentment.

time-read
8 minutos  |
May 25-31 2024
A mayor for everyone
New Zealand Listener

A mayor for everyone

The Far North's first Māori mayor is one of an emerging political generation bringing equity to the forefront. But a government reversal on Māori wards looms as a stumbling block.

time-read
10+ minutos  |
May 25-31 2024
We need to talk about dying
New Zealand Listener

We need to talk about dying

Whether by choice or weight of numbers, more of us will die at home in future. And with pressure to ease assisted dying restrictions, the gaps in community-based care need fixing - before time runs out.

time-read
10+ minutos  |
May 25-31 2024