The Daily Telegraph: All Sorts of Lives review: how Katherine Mansfield (and a dying fly) reinvented fiction
All Sorts of Lives review: how Katherine Mansfield (and a dying fly) reinvented fiction Claire Harman's biography celebrates a brilliant modernist writer who died 100 years ago this month, aged just ...
All Sorts of Lives review: how Katherine Mansfield (and a dying fly) reinvented fiction
The Independent: ‘She was on a par with Joyce, Lawrence and Woolf’: Katherine Mansfield’s new biographer on the writer’s legacy
Katherine Mansfield was the writer who didn’t sit still. In the century since her death, stories, memories and anecdotes have been passed down in which she seems akin to a human propeller. My ...
‘She was on a par with Joyce, Lawrence and Woolf’: Katherine Mansfield’s new biographer on the writer’s legacy
The Financial Times: All Sorts of Lives — Katherine Mansfield through her stories
Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter. Claire Harman’s new Katherine Mansfield biography, All Sorts of Lives, begins and ends bloodily, with the ...
To this day both spellings are regularly used in the English-speaking world. In the United States the spelling Katherine has been more popular since 1973. Famous bearers of the name include Catherine of Siena, a 14th-century mystic, and Catherine de' Medici, a 16th-century French queen.
Gender: Katherine is predominantly a female name. Origin: The name Katherine is Greek, with its earliest versions being Ekaterine or Aikaterine. Pronunciation: Katherine is typically pronounced “ Kath-er-in.” Popularity: Katherine is a very popular choice in many countries.
The name Katherine is a girl's name of Greek origin meaning "pure". Katherine is one of the oldest, most diverse, and all-around best names: it's powerful, feminine, royal, saintly, classic, popular, and adaptable.