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William Faulkner (1897–1962)

Author of The Sound and the Fury

451+ Works 90,538 Members 1,109 Reviews 496 Favorited

About the Author

Born in an old Mississippi family, William Faulkner made his home in Oxford, seat of the University of Mississippi. After the fifth grade he went to school only off and on-lived, read, and wrote much as he pleased. In 1918, refusing to enlist with the "Yankees," he joined the Canadian Air Force, show more and was transferred to the British Royal Air Force. After the war he studied a little at the University, did house painting, worked as a night superintendent at a power plant, went to New Orleans and became a friend of Sherwood Anderson, then to Europe and back home to Oxford. By this time he had written two novels. The Sound and the Fury followed in 1929. Financial success came with Sanctuary in 1931, which he assisted in filming. Faulkner 's novels are intense in their character portrayals of disintegrating Southern aristocrats, poor whites, and African Americans. A complex stream-of-consciousness rhetoric often involves Faulkner in lengthy sentences of anguished power. Most of his tales are set in the mythical Yoknapatawpha County, Mississippi, and are characterized by the use of many recurring characters from families of different social levels spanning more than a century. His best subjects are the old, dying South and the newer materialistic South. As I Lay Dying (1930), is a grotesquely tragicomic story about a family of poor southern whites. With Absalom, Absalom! (1936); the difficult parts of his famous short novel "The Bear" (published in Go Down, Moses, 1942); and the allegorical A Fable (1954), a non-Yoknapatawpha novel set in France during World War I; Faulkner returned to an innovative and difficult style that most readers have trouble with. Yet, interspersed among such works are collections of easily read stories originally published in popular magazines. There seems to be a growing sentiment among critics that the Snopes trilogy-The Hamlet (1940), The Town (1957), and The Mansion (1959)-for the most part an example of Faulkner's "moderate" style, could well be among his most important works. Faulkner was awarded the 1949 Nobel Prize for literature "for his powerful and artistically independent contribution to the new American novel," but it would appear now that he also deserved to win that honor for his contribution to world literature. When reporting his death, the Boston Globe quoted Faulkner's having once told an interviewer: "Since man is mortal, the only immortality for him is to leave something behind him that is immortal since it will always move. That is the artist's way of scribbling "Kilroy was here" on the wall of the final and irrevocable oblivion through which he must some day pass." In addition to the Nobel Prize, Faulkner received the Howells Medal of the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 1950, and in 1951 he was given the National Book Award for his Collected Stories Collected Stories. For his novel A Fable he received the National Book Award for the second time, as well as the Pulitzer Prize in 1955. The Reivers (1962) was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 1963. In 1957 and 1958, he was the University of Virginia's first writer-in-residence, and in January 1959 he accepted an appointment as consultant on contemporary literature to the Alderman Library of that university. Although Faulkner was not without honors in his lifetime and has received world recognition since then, it is surprising to learn that, when Malcolm Cowley edited The Portable Faulkner in 1946, he found that almost all of Faulkner's books were out of print. By arranging selections from the works to form a continuous chronicle, Cowley deserves much of the credit for making readers aware of the way in which Faulkner was creating a fictive world on a scale grander than that of any novelist since Balzac. William Faulkner died in Oxford, Mississippi, in 1962. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Disambiguation Notice:

This is not the same person as William Falkner (d. 1682), English theologian. Do not combine the two.

Image credit: Photo by Carl van Vechten
(LoC Prints and Photographs Division,
Van Vechten Collection)

Series

Works by William Faulkner

The Sound and the Fury (1929) — Author — 17,891 copies, 229 reviews
As I Lay Dying (1930) 15,401 copies, 221 reviews
Light in August (1932) 9,545 copies, 106 reviews
Absalom, Absalom! (1936) 7,942 copies, 107 reviews
Sanctuary (1931) 3,858 copies, 43 reviews
Go Down, Moses (1942) 3,424 copies, 34 reviews
The Reivers (1962) 2,377 copies, 31 reviews
Intruder in the Dust (1948) 2,147 copies, 33 reviews
The Unvanquished (1938) 2,019 copies, 16 reviews
Collected Stories of William Faulkner (1950) 1,973 copies, 8 reviews
The Hamlet (1940) 1,901 copies, 18 reviews
The Sound and the Fury [Norton Critical Edition] (1929) 1,877 copies, 22 reviews
The Wild Palms (1939) 1,353 copies, 15 reviews
A Fable (1954) 888 copies, 9 reviews
The Mansion (1959) — Author — 737 copies, 2 reviews
The Town (1957) — Author — 735 copies, 6 reviews
Soldiers' Pay (1926) 725 copies, 13 reviews
Requiem for a Nun (1951) 662 copies, 3 reviews
Selected Short Stories of William Faulkner (1961) 653 copies, 2 reviews
Sartoris (1929) 645 copies, 4 reviews
As I Lay Dying [Norton Critical Edition] (2009) 564 copies, 6 reviews
Mosquitoes (1927) 563 copies, 10 reviews
Pylon (1935) 532 copies, 7 reviews
The Sound and the Fury / As I Lay Dying (2000) 526 copies, 2 reviews
As I Lay Dying / The Sound and the Fury / Light in August (2005) — Author — 512 copies, 4 reviews
Knight's Gambit (1949) 479 copies, 8 reviews
Flags in the Dust (1929) — Author — 445 copies, 13 reviews
Uncollected Stories of William Faulkner (1979) 412 copies, 3 reviews
Novels, 1957-1962: The Town / The Mansion / The Reivers (1999) — Author — 383 copies, 2 reviews
The Faulkner Reader (1959) 340 copies, 1 review
The Portable Faulkner (1946) 285 copies, 4 reviews
The Big Sleep [1946 film] (1946) — Screenwriter — 281 copies, 4 reviews
New Orleans Sketches (1968) 219 copies, 1 review
Big Woods (1955) 213 copies, 2 reviews
To Have and Have Not [1944 film] (1944) — Screenwriter — 202 copies, 7 reviews
A Rose for Emily {Tale Blazers} (2007) 184 copies, 7 reviews
The Wishing Tree (1927) — Author — 166 copies, 4 reviews
The Bear (1942) 134 copies, 4 reviews
Sanctuary and Requiem for a Nun (1951) — Author — 126 copies, 1 review
These Thirteen (1931) 73 copies
The Old Man (1978) 72 copies, 5 reviews
A Rose for Emily and Other Stories (1990) 64 copies, 1 review
Barn Burning (1979) 64 copies, 2 reviews
A Rose for Emily {story} (2019) 52 copies, 1 review
Smoke [short story] (1993) 42 copies
Vision in Spring (1984) 42 copies
Mayday (1980) 36 copies
Ghosts of Rowan Oak: William Faulkner's Ghost Stories for Children (1980) — Contributor — 32 copies, 1 review
Father Abraham (1983) 30 copies
21 Essential American Short Stories (2011) — Contributor — 28 copies, 1 review
A Rose for Emily {book} (1996) 27 copies, 2 reviews
William Faulkner: early prose and poetry (1962) 26 copies, 1 review
Brer Tiger and the Big Wind (1995) 23 copies
Faulkner : Oeuvres romanesques, tome 1 (1977) — Author — 23 copies, 1 review
Helen: A Courtship and Mississippi Poems (1981) 22 copies, 1 review
Essays, Speeches & Public Letters {1965} (1966) — Author — 22 copies
Dry September 22 copies, 12 reviews
The Long Hot Summer (1958) 20 copies
Si yo amaneciera otra vez (1997) 16 copies
The Essential Faulkner (2013) — Author — 16 copies, 1 review
Una rosa per Emily (1997) — Author — 15 copies, 1 review
Barn Burning {story} (1997) — Author — 15 copies
The William Faulkner Audio Collection (2003) — Author — 14 copies, 1 review
Miss Zilphia Gant (1980) 14 copies
Eine Rose für Emily (1930) 13 copies
The Indispensable Faulkner (1950) 13 copies
That Evening Sun {story} (1931) 13 copies, 2 reviews
All the Dead Pilots (2002) 12 copies
Stories from six authors (2000) — Contributor — 12 copies, 1 review
Barn Burning and Other Stories (1971) — Author — 11 copies, 1 review
William Faulkner Reads (1992) 11 copies
Noveller (1992) 11 copies
Faulkner. Oeuvres romanesques. Tome 2/5 (La Pléiade) (2016) — Author — 11 copies, 1 review
Two Soldiers (1983) 11 copies
Red Leaves: Stories (1972) — Author — 10 copies, 1 review
The Marionettes (1975) 10 copies
The Best of Faulkner (1955) 10 copies
Obras completas (1964) 9 copies
Meistererzählungen (1970) 9 copies
Land of the Pharaohs [1955 film] (1955) — Screenwriter — 9 copies, 1 review
Sanctuary / Light in August (1978) — Author — 8 copies, 1 review
Privacy (2003) 8 copies
Obras escogidas. Tomo I (2005) 8 copies
Lo! 8 copies
Turnabout (1932) 8 copies
Seasons of Light in the Atchafalaya Basin (1983) — Author — 8 copies, 1 review
Schwarze Musik. (1994) 8 copies
As I Lay Dying [2013 film] (2013) — Author — 8 copies, 1 review
Faulkner : Oeuvres romanesques, tome 3 (1977) — Author — 7 copies
Spotted Horses (1989) 7 copies, 1 review
Mountain Victory (2002) 7 copies
Wash (2012) 7 copies
Cartas escogidas (1983) 6 copies
Contes (2024) 6 copies
Essential Faulkner (1967) 6 copies
Karhu ja muita novelleja (1969) 6 copies
A FAULKNER PERSPECTIVE (1976) 6 copies
Obras completas . I (2004) 6 copies
Red Leaves {story} — Author — 5 copies
Faulkner : Oeuvres romanesques, tome 4 (1977) — Author — 5 copies
Faulkner at Nagano (1956) 5 copies
Rose for Emily and Wash (1984) — Author — 5 copies
Douglas Sirk: Filmmaker Collection [videorecording] (2018) — Screenwriter — 5 copies
Romanzi (1995) 5 copies
Obras escogidas 5 copies
Ad Astra (2006) 4 copies
Nouvelles (2017) 4 copies
A Justice 4 copies
Obras Completas V (2005) 4 copies
Strange Love (1963) 3 copies
Mississippi Poems (1979) 3 copies
Ensayos y discursos (2012) 3 copies
Koy (2018) 3 copies
2 (2004) 3 copies
CUENTOS REUNIDOS (2013) 3 copies
Obras completas. VII (2005) 3 copies
Yenilmeyenler (2018) 3 copies
Honor 3 copies
Pantaloon in Black (1942) 3 copies
A Bear Hunt 3 copies
The Broach 3 copies
The Tall Men 3 copies
Elly 3 copies
Mirrors of Chartres Street (1925) 3 copies, 1 review
A hang és a téboly (1976) 3 copies, 1 review
A Courtship 3 copies
Opere scelte (1995) 3 copies
Stary 3 copies
Mississippi (2000) 2 copies
Death Drag 2 copies
Evangeline (1998) — Author — 2 copies
The Old People (1942) 2 copies
Faulkner's County: Tales of Yoknapatawpha County (1955) — Author — 2 copies
Werkausgabe 28 Briefe (1997) 2 copies
Obras completas . VI (2004) 2 copies
Victory 2 copies
Hair (1968) 2 copies
The Fire and the Hearth (1942) 2 copies
A Aldeia (2015) 2 copies
Fox Hunt 2 copies
Crevasse 2 copies
Artist at Home 2 copies
Golden Land 2 copies
Faulkner op West Point (1990) 2 copies
The Leg 2 copies
Beyond 2 copies
Carcassonne — Author — 2 copies
Mistral 2 copies
Mink 1 copy
Was (1942) 1 copy
Le opere 1 copy
Desce, Moisés (1995) 1 copy
Bygda (1996) 1 copy
The Waifs 1 copy
Lekeli Günler 1 copy, 1 review
Buka i bes (1977) 1 copy
Svetiliste (2017) 1 copy
O Akşam Güneşi 1 copy, 1 review
Dosegimde Olurken - Ayi 1 copy, 1 review
Humphrey Bogart Classics: Volume 2 — Writer — 1 copy
Old Man [1997 TV movie] (1997) — Author — 1 copy
Welcome to USA (2012) — Contributor — 1 copy
DUMAN 1 copy
TYMI 1 copy
Histoires diverses (1967) 1 copy
The Hill 1 copy
Cavalli pezzati (1997) 1 copy
12 סיפורים (2018) 1 copy
Delta Autumn (1942) 1 copy
Collected Storeies Vol. II 1 copy, 1 review
The Hound 1 copy
Elmer (1987) 1 copy
Amerikaanse verhalen — Contributor — 1 copy
Opere 1 copy
Smasogur 1 copy
Dilek Agaci (2016) 1 copy
Divlje palme 1 copy
"Hair" 1 copy
Snobovi 1 copy
Smásögur 1 copy
2003 1 copy
Duman 1 copy
Mektuplar (2014) 1 copy
البعوض 1 copy
Road to Glory (1964) 1 copy
TRE RÖVARE 1 copy
Byn roman 1 copy
Fumo 1 copy
Zascianek 1 copy
Wielki las (1997) 1 copy
Rezydencja (1983) 1 copy

Associated Works

The Best American Short Stories of the Century (2000) — Contributor — 1,603 copies, 10 reviews
The Norton Anthology of Short Fiction (1978) — Author, some editions — 1,475 copies, 4 reviews
50 Great Short Stories (1952) — Contributor — 1,314 copies, 8 reviews
Literature: An Introduction to Fiction, Poetry, and Drama (1995) — Contributor, some editions — 955 copies, 7 reviews
My Mistress's Sparrow Is Dead (2008) — Contributor — 777 copies, 20 reviews
The Oxford Book of American Short Stories (1992) — Contributor — 776 copies, 3 reviews
The Dark Descent (1987) — Contributor — 747 copies, 13 reviews
Short Story Masterpieces (1954) — Contributor — 711 copies, 3 reviews
Great Tales of Terror and the Supernatural (1944) — Contributor — 679 copies, 12 reviews
The Oxford Book of Gothic Tales (1992) — Contributor — 558 copies, 6 reviews
The Oxford Book of Short Stories (1981) — Contributor — 522 copies, 4 reviews
Great American Short Stories (1957) — Contributor — 516 copies, 3 reviews
The World of the Short Story: A 20th Century Collection (1986) — Contributor — 477 copies, 4 reviews
American Gothic Tales (William Abrahams) (1996) — Contributor — 474 copies, 5 reviews
The Best American Mystery Stories of the Century (2000) — Contributor — 469 copies, 7 reviews
Fifty Great American Short Stories (1965) — Contributor — 453 copies, 3 reviews
Great Detectives: A Century of the Best Mysteries from England and America (1984) — Contributor — 370 copies, 4 reviews
Best Short Stories of the Modern Age (1962) — Contributor, some editions — 341 copies, 4 reviews
Americans in Paris: A Literary Anthology (2004) — Contributor — 307 copies, 3 reviews
Men at War: The Best War Stories of All Time (1942) — Contributor — 305 copies
100 Years of the Best American Short Stories (2015) — Contributor — 303 copies, 3 reviews
A Treasury of Short Stories (1947) — Contributor — 301 copies
Six Great Modern Short Novels (1954) — Contributor — 278 copies, 2 reviews
The Treasury of American Short Stories (1981) — Contributor — 270 copies, 1 review
The Arbor House Treasury of Horror and the Supernatural (1981) — Contributor — 203 copies, 3 reviews
Nobel Prize Library: Faulkner, O'Neill, Steinbeck (1971) — Author — 194 copies
The Penguin Book of American Short Stories (1969) — Contributor — 193 copies, 1 review
The Oxford Book of American Detective Stories (1996) — Contributor — 184 copies, 1 review
In Another Part of the Forest: An Anthology of Gay Short Fiction (1994) — Contributor — 183 copies, 2 reviews
Sixteen Short Novels (1986) — Contributor — 181 copies, 1 review
Murder & Other Acts of Literature (1997) — Contributor — 151 copies, 2 reviews
A Pocket Book of Modern American Short Stories (1971) — Contributor — 148 copies, 2 reviews
Growing Up in the South: An Anthology of Modern Southern Literature (1991) — Contributor — 146 copies, 1 review
An Anthology of Famous American Stories (1953) — Contributor — 145 copies, 1 review
The Penguin Book of Horror Stories (1984) — Contributor — 144 copies, 2 reviews
The Saturday Evening Post Treasury (1954) — Contributor — 141 copies, 1 review
An American Album: One Hundred and Fifty Years of Harper's Magazine (2000) — Contributor — 140 copies, 1 review
The Signet Classic Book of Southern Short Stories (1991) — Contributor — 128 copies, 1 review
Magical Realist Fiction: An Anthology (1984) — Contributor — 116 copies, 1 review
Great Modern Reading (1943) — Contributor — 110 copies, 3 reviews
More Stories to Remember, Volume II (1958) — Contributor — 102 copies, 1 review
Norton Introduction to the Short Novel (1982) — Contributor — 101 copies, 1 review
The Literature of the American South: A Norton Anthology (1997) — Contributor — 101 copies
American Short Stories (1976) — Contributor, some editions — 99 copies
A Treasury of Civil War Stories (1986) — Contributor — 83 copies
The American Mercury Reader (1979) — Contributor — 81 copies, 1 review
Great American Mystery Stories of the 20th Century (1989) — Contributor — 78 copies
Great Stories by Nobel Prize Winners (1993) — Contributor — 77 copies, 1 review
Ten Modern Masters: An Anthology of the Short Story (1953) — Contributor — 76 copies
200 Years of Great American Short Stories (1975) — Contributor — 75 copies, 1 review
Bedside Book of Famous American Stories (1936) — Contributor — 71 copies
The Heath Anthology of American Literature, Concise Edition (2003) — Contributor — 69 copies, 1 review
The Medusa in the Shield (1990) — Contributor — 65 copies, 1 review
Gunga Din [1939 film] (1939) — Contributor — 62 copies, 1 review
65 Great Tales of Horror (1981) — Contributor — 62 copies
Dark Arrows: Great Stories of Revenge (1985) — Contributor — 62 copies
More Stories to Remember, Volumes I & II (1958) — Contributor — 58 copies
The Arbor House Treasury of Mystery and Suspense (1981) — Contributor — 55 copies
The Penguin Classic Crime Omnibus (1984) — Contributor — 54 copies
Reading for Pleasure (2023) — Contributor — 52 copies
Art of Fiction (1974) — Contributor — 51 copies
The Long, Hot Summer [1958 film] (1992) — Original story — 51 copies
The Oxford Book of Sea Stories (1994) — Contributor — 51 copies, 1 review
Eleven Modern Short Novels (1970) — Contributor — 50 copies, 1 review
The Experience of the American Woman (1978) — Contributor — 48 copies
The Random House Book of Sports Stories (1990) — Contributor — 47 copies
Masters of the Modern Short Story (1945) — Contributor — 47 copies
The Bedside Tales: A Gay Collection (1945) — Contributor — 45 copies
The lucifer society;: Macabre tales by great modern writers (1972) — Contributor — 45 copies, 1 review
The Signet Classic Book of Contemporary American Short Stories (1985) — Contributor — 44 copies, 1 review
The Oxford Book of Historical Stories (1994) — Contributor — 41 copies
A Quarto of Modern Literature (1935) — Contributor — 40 copies
Southern Dogs and Their People (2000) — Contributor — 40 copies
Fifty Best American Short Stories 1915-1965 (1965) — Contributor — 36 copies, 1 review
Tales of Terror (2007) — Contributor — 36 copies, 1 review
The Vintage Book of Classic Crime (1993) — Contributor — 35 copies
Best Horror Stories (1990) — Contributor — 35 copies, 2 reviews
New Stories from the South: The Year's Best, 1996 (1996) — Contributor — 34 copies
The Greatest War Stories Ever Told: Twenty-Four Incredible War Tales (2001) — Contributor — 31 copies, 1 review
Ten Modern Short Novels (1958) — Contributor — 29 copies
50 Best American Short Stories 1915-1939 (2013) — Contributor — 28 copies
Short Stories of the Sea (1984) — Contributor — 28 copies
American short stories, 1820 to the present (1952) — Contributor — 27 copies
Pulitzer Prize Reader (1961) — Contributor — 27 copies
Great Short Stories of the World (1965) — Contributor — 25 copies
Tales of Dungeons and Dragons (1986) — Contributor — 25 copies
Trial and Error: An Oxford Anthology of Legal Stories (1998) — Contributor — 24 copies
The Best Horror Stories (1977) — Contributor; Contributor — 24 copies
Studies in Fiction (1965) — Contributor — 22 copies, 1 review
A Treasury of Sea Stories (1948) — Contributor — 21 copies
Short Stories II (1961) — Contributor — 20 copies
Nine Short Novels (1964) — Contributor — 18 copies
Air Force [1943 film] (1943) — Screenwriter — 18 copies, 1 review
The Best American Short Stories 1966 (1966) — Contributor — 18 copies
Modern American Short Stories (1945) — Contributor — 17 copies
The Tarnished Angels [1957 film] (1957) — Original book — 16 copies, 1 review
All verdens fortellere (1990) — Contributor, some editions — 15 copies, 1 review
Mississippi Writers: An Anthology (1991) — Contributor — 14 copies
Twenty-Nine Stories (1960) — Contributor — 14 copies
Nobel Writers on Writing (2000) — Contributor — 14 copies
The Story Pocket Book (1944) — Contributor — 13 copies
The Best American Short Stories 1943 (1943) — Contributor — 13 copies
Loaded for Bear: A Treasury of Great Hunting Stories (1990) — Contributor — 13 copies
The World of Law, Volume I : The Law in Literature (1960) — Contributor — 13 copies
Favourite Scary Stories from Graveside Al (1996) — Contributor — 11 copies
31 Stories (2017) — Contributor — 11 copies, 2 reviews
Intruder in the Dust [1949 film] (1949) — Original novel — 11 copies
A New Southern Harvest (1957) — Contributor — 10 copies
The best of the Best American short stories, 1915-1950 (1975) — Contributor — 10 copies
More Stories to Remember, Volume IV (1958) — Contributor — 9 copies
Fiction Goes to Court (1954) — Contributor — 9 copies
Modern American Short Stories (1987) — Contributor — 8 copies
Writer to Writer: Readings on the Craft of Writing (1966) — Contributor — 8 copies
Time to Be Young: Great Stories of the Growing Years (1945) — Contributor — 7 copies
Modern American Short Stories (1941) — Contributor — 7 copies
William Faulkner's Barn Burning [1980 TV movie] (1985) — Original play — 7 copies
The Story Survey (1953) — Contributor — 6 copies
The Fireside Treasury of Modern Humor (1963) — Contributor — 6 copies
Strange Desires (1954) — Contributor — 5 copies
Twenty-Three Modern Stories (1963) — Contributor — 4 copies
Themes in American Literature (1972) — Contributor — 4 copies
Huivering wekken : 26 onthutsende verhalen (1982) — Contributor — 4 copies
American Short Stories (1978) — Contributor — 3 copies, 1 review
Daughters of Eve (1956) — Contributor — 3 copies
Best Crime Stories — Contributor — 3 copies
Modern Short Stories — Contributor — 3 copies
Breakdown and Other Thrillers (1968) — Contributor — 3 copies
Short Fiction: Shape and Substance (1971) — Contributor — 3 copies
Strange Barriers (1955) — Contributor — 2 copies
A Magnum of Mysteries (1963) — Contributor — 2 copies
American Short Stories (Oxford Literature Resources) (1992) — Contributor — 2 copies
Modern Short Stories — Contributor — 2 copies
Enjoying Stories (1987) — Contributor — 2 copies
El cuento literario (2008) — Contributor — 2 copies
Sanctuary [1961 film] (1961) — Original novel — 1 copy
The Narrative Impulse: Short Stories for Analysis (1963) — Contributor — 1 copy
The Family Reader of American Masterpieces (1959) — Contributor — 1 copy
The Saturday Evening Post Stories 1957 — Contributor — 1 copy
O. Henry Memorial Award Prize Stories of 1934 (1934) — Contributor — 1 copy
15 Great Stories of Today (1946) — Contributor — 1 copy
Modern American short stories (1963) — Contributor — 1 copy
The PL book of modern American short stories (1945) — Contributor — 1 copy
Introduction to Fiction (1974) — Contributor — 1 copy
The Avon Annual 1945: 18 Great Modern Stories (1945) — Contributor — 1 copy

Tagged

20th century (1,575) 20th century literature (522) America (258) American (1,636) American fiction (414) American literature (3,626) American South (614) anthology (1,808) classic (1,401) classics (1,531) death (222) family (295) Faulkner (1,431) fiction (12,208) gothic (209) horror (385) Library of America (361) literature (3,319) Mississippi (734) Modern Library (277) modernism (903) mystery (389) Nobel (243) Nobel Prize (461) novel (2,368) own (383) read (719) Roman (233) short stories (3,031) South (418) southern (959) southern fiction (238) southern gothic (530) southern literature (986) stream of consciousness (328) the south (213) to-read (3,960) unread (664) USA (561) William Faulkner (424)

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Faulkner, William
Legal name
Faulkner, William Cuthbert
Other names
Faulkner, Will
Birthdate
1897-09-25
Date of death
1962-07-06
Burial location
St. Peter's Cemetery, Oxford, Mississippi, USA
Gender
male
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
New Albany, Mississippi, USA
Place of death
Byhalia, Mississippi, USA
Cause of death
suffered a serious injury in a fall from his horse, which led to thrombosis
Places of residence
Oxford, Mississippi, USA
New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
Education
University of Mississippi
Occupations
novelist
short story writer
poet
literary critic
essayist
screenwriter (show all 14)
playwright
bank clerk
postmaster
roof painter
carpenter
deckhand
coal shoveler
pilot
Relationships
Faulkner, John (brother)
Falkner, Murry C. (brother)
Faulkner, Jim (nephew)
Falkner, William Clark (great-grandfather)
Percy, William Alexander (friend)
Anderson, Sherwood (friend) (show all 9)
West, Nathanael (friend)
Franklin, Malcolm A. (stepson)
Wells, Dean Faulkner (niece)
Organizations
British Armed Forces
American Academy of Arts and Letters
Sigma Alpha Epsilon
University of Mississippi (postmaster)
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (screenwriter)
Warner Brothers (screenwriter) (show all 8)
University of Virginia (writer-in-residence)
National Institute of Arts and Letters
Awards and honors
Nobel Prize (Literature, 1949)
National Institute of Arts and Letters (1939)
American Academy of Arts and Letters (1948)
William Dean Howells Medal (1950)
Chevalier de la Legion d'honneur (1951)
Silver Medal of the Greek Academy (1957) (show all 8)
National Institute of Arts and Letters Gold Medal (1962)
Created the PEN/Faulkner Award
Short biography
William Cuthbert Faulkner (September 25, 1897 – July 6, 1962) was an American writer and Nobel Prize laureate from Oxford, Mississippi. Faulkner wrote novels, short stories, screenplays, poetry, essays, and a play. He is primarily known for his novels and short stories set in the fictional Yoknapatawpha County, based on Lafayette County, Mississippi, where he spent most of his life.

Faulkner is one of the most celebrated writers in American literature generally and Southern literature specifically. Though his work was published as early as 1919 and largely during the 1920s and 1930s, Faulkner's renown reached its peak upon the publication of Malcolm Cowley's The Portable Faulkner and his 1949 Nobel Prize in Literature, making him the only Mississippi-born Nobel winner. Two of his works, A Fable (1954) and his last novel The Reivers (1962), each won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction. In 1998, the Modern Library ranked his 1929 novel The Sound and the Fury sixth on its list of the 100 best English-language novels of the 20th century; also on the list were As I Lay Dying (1930) and Light in August (1932). Absalom, Absalom! (1936) appears on similar lists.
Disambiguation notice
This is not the same person as William Falkner (d. 1682), English theologian. Do not combine the two.

Members

Discussions

Folio Society Devotees: Sound and Fury in Book talk (October 2023)
Folio Society Devotees: Sound and Fury in Folio Society Devotees (October 2023)
The Snopes Trilogy, Volume III, The Mansion in Club Read 2023 (September 2023)
The Snopes Trilogy, Volume II, The Town in Club Read 2023 (August 2023)
The Snopes Trilogy Group Read: The Hamlet in Club Read 2023 (July 2023)
The Sound and the Fury LE in Folio Society Devotees (May 2021)
Faulkner and james Branch Cabell in William Faulkner and his Literary Kin (October 2020)
As I Lay Dying: The More You Know. in William Faulkner and his Literary Kin (November 2018)
William Faulkner- American Author Challenge in 75 Books Challenge for 2014 (March 2014)
LIGHT IN AUGUST - Group Read Discussion Thread in 75 Books Challenge for 2013 (August 2013)
The Sound and the Fury GROUP READ in 2013 Category Challenge (April 2013)

Reviews

I thought for sure I wasn't gonna care for this one in the first half; although I thought the stream of consciousness writing style was really inventive and felt ahead of its time, I felt like this book would require intense study and rereading to be appreciated, or even understood, at any level, which I did not feel any compulsion to do.

But the second half really helped put everything in context, and pulling back the curtain from the viewpoint of such a Grade A piece of shit like Jason Compson says something about the mindsey of the author. The decline of southern slave aristocracy, and the struggle of the mindset that came with that to fit in to a reconstructionist society, turned into a compelling read that I would consider revisiting in order to fully comprehend.… (more)
 
Flagged
Tgoldhush | 228 other reviews | Dec 26, 2024 |
84. The Unvanquished by William Faulkner
OPD: 1938
format: 260-page paperback
acquired: March (from Faulkner House in New Orleans) read: Dec 17-23 time reading: 8:40, 2.0 mpp
rating: 4
genre/style: Classic short stories theme: Faulkner
locations: Yoknapatawpha, county, Mississippi
about the author: 1897-1962. American Noble Laureate who was born in New Albany, MS, and lived most of his life in Oxford, MS.

My 13th book by Faulkner, and by far the easiest to read. It’s kind of like a break. It’s more a boy’s story, and it has a touch of a Huck Finn quality, with a black and white bond boy bond. The race aspect has serious issues but also has a warmth and intimacy within a not very warm environment.

Within Faulkner's Yoknapatawpha books, this is the story of the first Bayard Sartoris, who came of age during the American Civil War. Too young to fight, he stays home with his grandmother and their house slaves, while his father goes off to fight. But when the book opens, the Union troops are into Mississippi. During the first story Bayard and his black childhood friend Ringo, a slave, work together to shoot down a Union scout. They kill only a horse, and the Union soldiers are gentle about it. But so begins this complicated view of the war from the losing home front.

The prose is simple, always in Bayard's own voice, but stories are nicely worked out, wandering and paced, and they address a lot of interesting aspects of the war - the Union burning of towns and fine houses, the freed slaves wandering en masse towards who knows where, the sense of loyalty in some slaves, like Ringo, and the sense of injustice in others. Also Women confederate soldiers, and a sense of the outlaw violence as the war ends. Biographers say it's hard to know Faulkner's sources or accuracy of this era that he happens to bring to life. It's not clear how much is imagined or might have come from local lore. But it's an interesting picture regardless.

These are also nicely plotted stories, with the penultimate story capitalizing on everything before and ramping up the tension and sustaining it. This book is, perhaps, a good introduction to Faulkner.

2024
https://www.librarything.com/topic/365030#8705265
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dchaikin | 15 other reviews | Dec 24, 2024 |
81. Absalom, Absalom! by William Faulkner
OPD: 1936
format: 311-page paperback
acquired: April read: Nov 26 – Dec 7 time reading: 19:52, 3.8 mpp
rating: 4
genre/style: classic theme: Faulkner
locations: Mississippi, Massachusetts, and somewhere behind Sherman’s Civil War advance line
about the author: 1897-1962. American Noble Laureate who was born in New Albany, MS, and lived most of his life in Oxford, MS.

"Why do you hate the South?"

"I don't hate it," Quentin said, quickly, at once, immediately, "I don't hate it," he said. I don't hate it he thought, panting in the cold air, the iron New England dark: I don't. I don't! I don't hate it! I don't hate it!

Well, at four minutes a page, I found this hard. This is my twelfth Faulkner novel as I work through his fiction. So, I don't say that randomly, this is hard for Faulkner.

Many serious critics and fans consider this his best work. He apparently thought so himself, delivering it to his publisher with the comment that he wrote the great American novel. It's The South, captured in the story of Colonel Thomas Sutpen. Sutpen arrived in Mississippi in 1833 with no known past, and acquired 100 acres of prime land from a Choctaw outside of fictional Jefferson, the Sutpen 100. Then he acquired respectability by marrying a woman in town, Ellen Coldfield, daughter of a devout shop owner. That is not say he wasn't considered wild or immoral. He came to town with 8 French-speaking slaves (illegally imported), fathered a child by one. He was arrested for the manner in which is acquired the material to furnish his house. He was crazy, but he acquired his respectability, had a son and daughter. And when the Civil War came, joined the Confederate army, as did his son. But at the end of the war, Sutpen now a widower, an odd sequence of events happened. His son shot his daughter's fiancé and his own best friend, a kind of dandy from New Orleans, and then this son disappeared. Sutpen's daughter, widowed before marriage, would never marry. Sutpen lost his name and lineage.

But we are not told this story in any direct manner. It's relayed through storytelling voices. First through Rosa Coldfield, the younger sister of Ellen. As an old lady, nearing her own death, she relays this story to a family friend, young Quentin Compson, about to leave for school at Harvard, in faraway northern Massachusetts. Her monotonous voice she relays this Quentin, in the hot Mississippi summer, in the stuffy indoors with aged dust motes, in long endless sentences. Quentin, puzzled, is taken in. That's the first section, the first telling. In the remaining length of the book Quentin sits with his roommate, Canadian student Shreve. Together they continue the story, partially through a letter from Quentin's father, and egged on continuously by a curiously shirtless Shreve in the freezing Massachusetts winter. At points Shreve is reading Quentin's father's letter to Quentin, the version of the story that was relayed to Quentin's father by Quentin's grandfather. Who is speaking, what is the source, how reliable is any of this, what is factual and what is conjecture.

Whatever it is, the weird story is not the point, it's what's under the story, the why. The story gets farther and farther out there, but never far enough to motivate these deranged characters. They are always worse than that.

One of the interesting aspects of the story, and also what makes it so difficult, is the way it's relayed. Whether Rosa Coldfield, Quentin, his father, Shreve, or at times, Quentin and Shreve in unison, to story is relayed in monotone, relentlessly, a dispassionate voice, except when Shreve cries, "Wait!", and Quentin never does wait. There is a possession. Like Virgil's Sibyl, this a Sibylline telling, and incantation, sometimes coming in two parallel voices. Sentences and paragraphs go on for pages, the voice carrying over, circling in on itself, making it very hard to keep track. I had to keep backtracking to figure out where I was (hence my four-minutes a page.)

In a backhanded criticism, I was never really bored. I was always interested, although often mentally exhausted. It has its own propelling force to carry you along. But in a more direct criticism, it's not my favorite Faulkner. The overall point simplifies down too much for me, by which I mean once I finished, I felt done. I don't spend time wondering on it, like I do most of Faulkner's other books. It wraps itself up. I've dug in while reading, and I'm leaving those holes as they are, incomplete, equipment derelict, nothing cleaned up, just lumps with scattered junk (perhaps in the Mississippi mud, and perhaps only there till the next heavy rain).

2024
https://www.librarything.com/topic/365030#8702439
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dchaikin | 106 other reviews | Dec 21, 2024 |
This is a diaphanous commentary on southern ideals … from family lines of work and the importance of an education whether it’s Harvard or any city college … but what we have is the impossibility of Ignorance the way only the lucky chosen are shielded from travesty … the classicism is in its dialogue that becomes a strange vertigo of words and islands of thought that pushes the boundaries of colloquial living I stress to say some vernacular becomes known and not known as well as understood through this retelling of a classic American myth… (more)
 
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Sri-Hari-Palacio-MEd | 228 other reviews | Dec 21, 2024 |

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