From Publishers Weekly
Though uneven and poorly organized, this collection of short stories, addressed to the writer (1888-1923) who was known as Katherine Mansfield, has its pleasures. An adolescent learns his family history from a father who gets facts wrong but emotions right in a fine tale called "A Contemporary Kezia," but only at book's end does "The Washerwoman's Children" reveal who Kezia is. The touching "Country Life," in which a child gets wished-for electricity that exposes her home's shabbiness and "eats up all the silence," is preceded by works less limber and poignant. Among them is "Maata," a stiff-jointed novella about a Maori journalist looking for a missing manuscript by Mansfield, to whom Ihimaera, a fellow New Zealander, pays somewhat fulsome homage in his introduction. Curiously outdated in technique--headlines are used to indicate passing time; a paragraph begins, "Later, after their healthy sexuality had been satisfied"a character cries, "Praise Neptune" --the novella is less successful than the stories that follow. A journalist, opera librettist and author of seven previous books, Ihimaera has considerable talent, which in his best stories shines through.
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