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This is a better point of entry for Faulkner than most of his other novels, if I recall Larry Send a noteboard - 06/01/2012 11:50:03 PM
Excepting, to be fair, your review of A Rose For Emily that you mention, that sounded like it might appeal to me as well.

Like many people, I have a tendency of shying away the minute someone uses the term "stream of consciousness" in a review, but going by your review and the quotes, short as they are, just because I don't like it in Woolf doesn't mean I would dislike it here.


It works here because the thought stream doesn't deviate much from the main plot; those moments serve to reinforce it and the characterizations. One also doesn't need to know much about the families in his stories, as this functions well away from the shared setting of the other tales.
Illusions fall like the husk of a fruit, one after another, and the fruit is experience. - Narrator, Sylvie

Je suis méchant.
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Faulkner Fridays: As I Lay Dying (1930) - 06/01/2012 06:39:07 AM 1020 Views
Of the Faulkner that I have read, - 06/01/2012 01:32:46 PM 814 Views
No time like the present to start! - 06/01/2012 07:27:31 PM 777 Views
I started The Sound and the Fury but didn't finish - 06/01/2012 08:51:02 PM 746 Views
I think it might be easier - 06/01/2012 11:47:21 PM 763 Views
You have a typo in the final paragraph. - 06/01/2012 10:18:58 PM 682 Views
Corrected it in the original - 06/01/2012 11:46:27 PM 828 Views
Well, that sounds a lot more appealing than the impression of Faulkner I had so far. - 06/01/2012 11:47:26 PM 660 Views
This is a better point of entry for Faulkner than most of his other novels, if I recall - 06/01/2012 11:50:03 PM 872 Views
It's been quite a long time since I read this. - 08/01/2012 07:30:41 PM 851 Views
I miss Faulkner - 11/01/2012 03:28:31 PM 739 Views

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