The Faulkner Reader
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- 0,99 €
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- 0,99 €
Publisher Description
The Faulkner Reader (1954)
This anthology, assembled with Faulkner’s input, serves as an introduction to his major themes, settings, and narrative techniques. It combines the complete text of his novel The Sound and the Fury with selected stories, excerpts from other novels, and speeches, including his Nobel Prize address. Spanning his early to mid-career, the book showcases Faulkner’s fictional Yoknapatawpha County—a microcosm of the American South marked by racial tension, family decline, and the weight of history. Short stories such as “A Rose for Emily” and “Barn Burning” highlight his gift for compressed drama, while passages from works like Light in August and Go Down, Moses show his longer, more experimental style. Together, the selections reveal his recurring concerns with memory, time, and moral responsibility as well as his innovative use of multiple perspectives and stream-of-consciousness. The Faulkner Reader remains a gateway for readers wanting a single volume that distills his complexity and breadth.