Born
and brought up on a hill farm in the north of England, Kathleen
Jones escaped to London as a teenager in order to become a writer.
She knew nothing about Kathleen Mansfield Beauchamp until she found
a copy of Katherine Mansfield's Journal in a second hand book shop
and read it until the pages fell apart. It was the beginning of
Kathleen's fascination with the New Zealand writer whose first name
she shared. A teenage marriage and twenty seven addresses in ten
years, meant that Kathleen identified very strongly with Mansfield's
nomadic life and the struggle to find space to write.
Kathleen
spent several years in Africa and the Middle East - where she worked
in English broadcasting - before returning home. She read law and
then English Literature as a mature student at university before
specialising in early women writers - work that culminated in A
Glorious Fame, the life of Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle.
Her extensive published work includes radio journalism, articles
for magazines and newspapers, short fiction and eleven books - a
mixture of biography, general non-fiction and two poetry collections.
Now living in Cumbria, Kathleen's passion for Katherine Mansfield
has at last found expression in a biography, which she has been
working on for several years, visiting New Zealand and gathering
research material from hundreds of sources. Kathleen's work 'is
characterised by an ability to select and extract details from her
research and use them to paint a coherent portrait of her subject,
bringing them vividly to life. She crafts strong stories from real
events leaving you with a feeling that you know and understand the
subject of the biography'.
|
 |