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The Garden Party and Other Stories by Katherine Mansfield available freely at Project Gutenberg; The Garden Party and Other Stories at the British Library; The Garden Party (EFL/ESL Graded Readers) - Oxford Graded Reader / Matatabi Graded Reader; The Garden Party and Other Stories at the New Zealand Text Centre
The Garden Party" is a 1922 short story by Katherine Mansfield. It was first published (as "The Garden-Party") in three parts in the Saturday Westminster Gazette on 4 and 11 February 1922, and the Weekly Westminster Gazette on 18 February 1922. [1] It later appeared in The Garden Party and Other Stories. [2]
In addition, this volume includes "An African Story", which was derived from the unfinished and heavily edited posthumous novel The Garden of Eden (1986), and two parts of the 1937 novel To Have And Have Not, "One Trip Across" (Cosmopolitan, May 1934) and "The Tradesman's Return" (Esquire, February 1936), in their original magazine versions.
"At the Bay" is a 1922 short story by Katherine Mansfield.It was first published in the London Mercury in January 1922 in twelve sections, and later reprinted in The Garden Party and Other Stories (1922) with a short descriptive coda which is now the thirteenth section. [1]
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The man slowly sickens, but reveals nothing. When the wife increases the dose, he descends into a coma, and the wife flees the village, fearing she will be charged with murder. The man gradually regains his health, and resumes his work in the garden. He becomes increasingly detached from the local community, tending only to his garden.
The protagonist is Hugo Pludek, an average person from a middle-class Czech family. His parents are worried about his future, so they arrange an appointment for him with the influential Mr. Kalabis. Kalabis cannot show up because he is going to a garden party held by the Liquidation Office, so Hugo's parents send him there.
Suddenly Last Summer was written in New York in 1957 and debuted as part of a double bill of one-act plays by Williams, titled Garden District. [26] (The other one-act play was Something Unspoken.) Garden District premiered Off-Broadway at the York Playhouse on January 7, 1958.