The Sound and the Fury
by William Faulkner
List Price: $10.00
Pages: 336
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 0679732241
Publisher: Vintage

William Faulkner was born in New Albany, Mississippi, on September 25,
1897. His family was rooted in local history: his great-grandfather, a
Confederate colonel and state politician, was assassinated by a former
partner in 1889, and his grandfather was a wealth lawyer who owned a railroad.
When Faulkner was five his parents moved to Oxford, Mississippi, where
he received a desultory education in local schools, dropping out of high
school in 1915. Rejected for pilot training in the U.S. Army, he passed
himself off as British and joined the Canadian Royal Air Force in 1918,
but the war ended before he saw any service. After the war, he took some
classes at the University of Mississippi and worked for a time at the
university post office. Mostly, however, he educated himself by reading
promiscuously.
Faulkner had begun writing
poems when he was a schoolboy, and in 1924 he published a poetry collection,
The Marble Faun, at his own expense. His literary aspirations were
fueled by his close friendship with Sherwood Anderson, whom he met during
a stay in New Orleans. Faulkner's first novel, Soldier's Pay, was
published in 1926, followed a year later by Mosquitoes, a literary
satire. His next book, Flags in the Dust, was heavily cut and rearranged
at the publisher's insistence and appeared finally as Sartoris
in 1929. In the meantime he had completed The Sound and the Fury,
and when it appeared at the end of 1929 he had finished Sanctuary
and was ready to begin writing As I Lay Dying. That same year he
married Estelle Oldham, whom he had courted a decade earlier.
Although Faulkner gained literary
acclaim from these and subsequent novels--Light in August (1932),
Pylon (1935), Absalom, Absalom! (1936), The Unvanquished
(1938), The Wild Palms (1939), The Hamlet (1940), and Go
Down, Moses (1942)-- and continued to publish stories regularly in
magazines, he was unable to support himself solely by writing fiction.
he worked as a screenwriter for MGM, Twentieth Century-Fox, and Warner
Brothers, forming a close relationship with director Howard Hawks, with
whom he worked on To Have and Have Not, The Big Sleep, and
Land of the Pharaohs, among other films. In 1944 all but one of
Faulkner's novels were out of print, and his personal life was at low
ebb due in part to his chronic heavy drinking. During the war he had been
discovered by Sartre and Camus and others in the French literary world.
In the postwar period his reputation rebounded, as Malcolm Cowley's anthology
The Portable Faulkner brought him fresh attention in America, and
the immense esteem in which he was held in Europe consolidated his worldwide
stature.
Faulkner wrote seventeen books
set in the mythical Yoknapatawpha County, home of the Compson family in
The Sound and the Fury. "No land in all fiction lives more vividly
in its physical presence than this county of Faulkner's imagination,"
Robert Penn Warren wrote in an essay on Cowley's anthology. "The descendants
of the old families, the descendants of bushwhackers and carpetbaggers,
the swamp rats, the Negro cooks and farm hands, the bootleggers and gangsters,
tenant farmers, college boys, county-seat lawyers, country storekeepers,
peddlers—all are here in their fullness of life and their complicated
interrelations." In 1950, Faulkner traveled to Sweden to accept the 1949
Nobel Prize for Literature. In later books-- Intruder in the Dust
(1948), Requiem for a Nun (1951), A Fable (1954), The
Town (1957), The Mansion (1959), and The Reivers (1962)
--he continued to explore what he had called "the problems of the human
heart in conflict with itself," but did so in the context of Yoknapatawpha's
increasing connection with the modern world. He died of a heart attack
on July 6, 1962.
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