- S. S. Koteliansky
S.S. Koteliansky, or Samuel Solomonovich Koteliansky, (1882–
January 21 ,1955 ) was born in the small Jewish "shtetl" (town) of Ostropol in theUkraine , where his first language almost certainly wasYiddish . He was educated and attended university in Russia.Biography
By 1911, he had moved to
London , where he became a great friend ofD. H. Lawrence , and Leonard andVirginia Woolf . He also adored short-story writerKatherine Mansfield . Although his romantic affection for her was not reciprocated, the two maintained a close relationship in person and in letters until her untimely death in 1923.He was business manager of "
The Adelphi ", a prominent literary journal that published works of Lawrence, Mansfield, the youngDylan Thomas , and many other leading lights of mid-twentieth-century English letters from its founding in 1923 until Koteliansky broke with the journal's founder (and Katherine Mansfield's one-time husband)John Middleton Murry in 1924. He was an early translator into English (often with the collaboration of Leonard or Virginia Woolf) of works of a number of Russian authors, such as Dostoevsky and Chekhov, and he helped those authors achieve prominence in the English-speaking world.Koteliansky ('Kot') was a close friend of the artist,
Mark Gertler , and they corresponded extensively from 1914 until Gertler's death in 1939.Koteliansky was a fascinating figure, who made the transition from his origins in a small Jewish "shtetl" to distinction in the rarefied world of English letters in the early twentieth century. Although he was not a creative writer himself, he befriended, corresponded with, helped publish, and otherwise served as intermediary between some of the most prominent people in English literary life in the early twentieth century.
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