Alphabetically-arranged entries provide information about Faulkner's life and work, covering his novels, short fiction, poetry, essays, reviews, speeches, screenplays, letters, and his family, friends, and associates.
The novels of William Faulkner continue to fascinate and inspire. This compendium of critical thought-including Robert Penn Warren, Graham Greene, Lionel Trilling, Malcolm Cowley, and George Orwell, among others-will aid...
Connors, Buck JEFFERSON's city marshal; he is referred to as Mr. Buck Connor by Tomey's Turl Beauchamp and as Mr. Buck by Otis Harker. Connors investigates the brass fittings missing from the town's power plant.
Karen Kaivola remarked that, as first-time readers of The Sound and the Fury “move with Benjy across the boundaries of time and space, Quentin's gender identity is not clear. Sometimes female (Miss Quentin) and sometimes male, ...
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Faulkner and the Thoroughly Modern Novel. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1991. Hoffman, Daniel. Faulkner's Country Matters: Folklore and Fable in Yoknapatawpha. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1989.
William Cobb, Captain Billy's Troopers: A Writer's Life (Tuscaloosa, AL, 2015), p. 94. Joseph Blotner, ed., Selected Letters of William Faulkner (New York, 1977), p. 314. William Faulkner, 'Interviews in Japan', in Lion in the Garden: ...
This is the story of the man who wrote timeless works and lived in and through his novels.
An exploration of the Nobel laureate's engagement with Native Americans and the ways in which Native American writing illuminates Faulkner
B. Robbins, “The Pragmatic Modernist,” 241: “All artistic works are shaped by networks and conditions outside of themselves, despite their possible claims to autonomy.” 7. B. Robbins, “The Pragmatic Modernist,” 243.
"What a pleasure! . . . Essential for understanding Faulkner, and a good read for everybody." -Noel Polk