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You likely have missed some things Larry Send a noteboard - 09/05/2011 04:24:43 AM
Some of those elements are going to appeal more to Southerners and to those (like Latin Americans, whose Boom Generation writers cite Faulkner as a major inspiration) who have pride in conjunction with a sense of desolate degradation and destruction. I would say read some of his other work (perhaps "A Rose for Emily," which is a short story and his most famous) and then come back to it a year or two from now.

Oh, and if you want to see a much more direct Faulkner, I just posted an excerpt from a crucial passage to his 1948 novel, Intruder in the Dust, that goes much more directly to the heart of the matter. It presages in some ways his 1950 Nobel acceptance speech.
Illusions fall like the husk of a fruit, one after another, and the fruit is experience. - Narrator, Sylvie

Je suis méchant.
Link to the quote and then to the Nobel speech link
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Sooo, nearly done with The Sound and the Fury - 07/05/2011 04:54:05 PM 728 Views
I studied it at uni. - 07/05/2011 04:59:32 PM 655 Views
One of my favorite novels. - 07/05/2011 10:59:39 PM 698 Views
It's a fairly annoying book to read, IMHO. - 09/05/2011 02:15:34 AM 1030 Views
You likely have missed some things - 09/05/2011 04:24:43 AM 732 Views
I had to force myself to finish it. - 09/05/2011 02:28:46 PM 605 Views

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