Cultural Cross Sections Alex Wade View inland from the top of Zennor Hill / Courtesy of the author Walking his dogs through the Zennor moors, a writer in Cornwall contemplates the area’s literary history and discovers the ever-growing distance between the new reality brought by the pandemic and his family’s plans for a two-year stay on the Avenue Katherine Mansfield. What does it take to decide to up sticks and live abroad? More than just a name, although I confess I liked the idea of living on the Avenue Katherine Mansfield in Menton, the last outpost of France on the Côte d’Azur before Italy. We’d been visiting the town for the past few years, and a villa was available to rent on the road named after the New Zealand modernist. We were in Menton in February, in the days before coronavirus took hold in Milan. We viewed the villa. We took our nearly-three daughter to a maternelle. We found a dance school, and a dog sitter, and we agreed: it was now or never. We signed up to rent the villa for two years, from 1 September. Back in Cornwall we told our parents and made our plans. I bought Caroline a selection of Mansfield’s short stories. I was punished for not ordering the book from the Edge of the World, Penzance’s suitably named bookshop: Amazon’s delivery driver knocked on my door, smiled, and told me he’d put it through the letterbox of No. 7 opposite, only to realize our No. 7 was its intended destination. Kath, the other No.... Continue reading at 'World Literature Today'
[ World Literature Today | 2020-05-07 13:18:25 UTC ]
Written By: Lisa Campbell Publication Date: Thu, 28/07/2011 - 08:37 BBC Radio 4 seems to have performed a partial u-turn on its decision to cut the number of short stories it airs from three to one per week, with a compromise of two weekly broadcasts. Listeners, authors and celebrities such as... Continue reading at The Bookseller
[ The Bookseller | 2011-07-28 00:00:00 UTC ]
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