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William Faulkner : stories / Theresa M. Towner, editor.

Van Pelt Library PS3511.A86 A6 2023
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Faulkner, William, 1897-1962, author.
Contributor:
Towner, Theresa M., editor.
Series:
Library of America ; 375.
The Library of America ; 375
Standardized Title:
Short stories. Selections
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
American literature.
Genre:
short stories.
Short stories.
Physical Description:
x, 1160 pages ; 21 cm.
Place of Publication:
New York, N.Y. : The Library of America, 2023
Summary:
"William Faulkner called the short story "the most demanding form after poetry." The fifty-four stories gathered here show him not only mastering the form but revolutionizing its possibilities, distilling an epic breadth of vision into narratives that conjure an intimate sense of place and the abiding presence of history and legend. Library of America caps its Faulkner edition with this volume presenting all the stories he collected in his lifetime. Carefully curated by the author, each of the three classic collections gathered here has its own artistic coherence and integrity, and is published in a newly corrected text. The six stories in Knight's Gambit (1949) feature Yoknapatawpha County lawyer Gavin Stevens, a literary precursor of Atticus Finch. Harvard- and Heidelberg-trained yet sympathetic to the foibles of his small-town and country neighbors, Stevens is equal parts detective, confessor, and knight-errant, single-minded in his pursuit of justice but clear-eyed in his understanding that "justice is accomplished lots of times by methods that wont bear looking at." Collected Stories (1950) is one of the major works of American short fiction. Its forty-two stories were grouped by Faulkner into six thematic sections that survey the range of his literary universe, from World War I France to Hollywood to the towns and forests of Mississippi. Published just months before Faulkner was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature, it includes such memorable works as the Gothic-inflected "A Rose for Emily," the heartbreaking "That Evening Sun," and "The Brooch," a powerful and unsettling story about a man torn between his mother and his wife. The hunting stories in Big Woods (1955), the final collection Faulkner saw through the press, were significantly revised for publication in book form, linked with what he called "interrupted catalysts," brief passages adapted from earlier novels and stories. "The Bear," the first story in the collection and one of Faulkner's enduring masterpieces, is a haunting tale about the initiation into adulthood and the terrible pull of the past. The stories that follow move forward into the twentieth century to trace the disappearance of the wilderness and the cultures it sustained. Rounding out the volume is an appendix containing two classic stories not included in Faulkner's Collected Stories, "The Hound" and "Spotted Horses," along with his 1950 Nobel Prize acceptance speech and the fictionalized autobiographical essay "Mississippi.""--Provided by publisher.
Contents:
Knight's gambit. Smoke ; Monk ; Hand upon the waters ; Tomorrow ; An error in chemistry ; Knight's gambit
Collected stories. The country. Barn burning ; Shingles for the Lord ; The tall men ; A bear hunt ; Two soldiers ; Shall not perish
The village. A rose for Emily ; Hair ; Centaur in brass ; Dry September ; Death drag ; Elly ; Uncle Willy ; Mule in the yard ; That will be fine ; That evening sun
The wilderness. Red leaves ; A justice ; A courtship ; Lo!
The wasteland. Ad astra ; Victory ; Crevasse ; Turnabout ; All the dead pilots
The middle ground. Wash ; Honor ; Doctor Martino ; Fox hunt ; Pennsylvania Station ; Artist at home ; The brooch ; My grandmother Millard ; Golden land ; There was a queen ; Mountain victory
Beyond. Beyond ; Black music ; The leg ; Mistral ; Divorce in Naples ; Carcassonne
Big woods. The bear ; The old people ; A bear hunt ; Race at morning
Other works. Spotted horses ; The hound ; Speech of acceptance of the Nobel Prize for Literature ; Mississippi
Chronology.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN:
9781598537529
1598537520
OCLC:
1395952452

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