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Griff in den Staub by William Faulkner
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Griff in den Staub (original 1948; edition 2007)

by William Faulkner

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2,080327,753 (3.85)78
At once an engrossing murder mystery and an unflinching portrait of racial injustice in the Reconstruction South, Intruder in the Dust stands out as a true classic of Southern literature. A classic Faulkner novel which explores the lives of a family of characters in the South. An aging black who has long refused to adopt the black's traditionally servile attitude is wrongfully accused of murdering a white man.… (more)
Member:pixauge
Title:Griff in den Staub
Authors:William Faulkner
Info:Diogenes Verlag AG (2007), Paperback
Collections:Your library, Wishlist
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Intruder in the Dust by William Faulkner (1948)

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Showing 1-5 of 29 (next | show all)
This book feels like William Faulkner trying to write a high-spirited boy's adventure story. Only, as it's William Faulkner, it's a high-spirited boy's adventure story about the South's deeply entrenched struggle with racism, death, family, identity, and punctuation. Faulkner departs from his traditional formula by leaving out sex and dredging up some happiness, which comes off as an interesting experiment -- the reader familiar with Faulkner keeps waiting for the other shoe to drop and the racist violence to begin. But they don't, and eventually the reader realizes that it's all been disappointingly sweet. ( )
  proustbot | Jun 19, 2023 |
Polemically and poetically dense, Intruder will take many readings to completely absorb.

A few years ago when I was reading later Faulkner novels, a friend said to stop because he was a racist.
I recently read and now agree that INTRUDER IN THE DUST proves that he was not a racist

Faulkner forever had faith that the South would fare best if whites resolved their own racism - if only that had been true!!!

Readers may hope that the descendants of the 16 year old hero followed his courage and inspiration. ( )
  m.belljackson | Apr 5, 2023 |
Starts out so promising in terms of racial progress, but ultimately frustrating and frightening in the main character (and others' underlying racial sentiments). Worth the read, but frustrating as a sort of final place to leave Faulkner on race. ( )
  askannakarenina | Sep 16, 2020 |
William Faulkner rarely gives us a character easily described as “admirable”. But in Intruder in the Dust, we meet Lucas Beauchamp, a black man whose integrity, strength and moral soundness we simply must admire. He is the focus of the mystery that forms what plot there is in this novel. After being discovered standing over the dead body of a white man, with his recently fired Saturday pistol in his pocket, Lucas is assumed to be the killer of one of the Beat Four Gowries, a seriously bad lot. Enter 16-year-old Charles “Chick” Mallison, who had an enlightening encounter with Lucas when he was 10 or 11 which he has never forgotten, and which has left him considerably unsettled in his mind about Southern culture, race, and his own place in the society he’s about to inherit. Lucas sees Chick and the boy’s uncle, the overeducated lawyer Gavin Stevens, as his only hope of proving the he did not shoot Vinson Gowrie. There follows a grim, nearly farcical, round of grave openings and closings as Chick and his accomplice, Miss Eunice Habersham, attempt to uncover evidence that will prevent either the townspeople or the Beat Four crowd from lynching this man who is the source of so much of his own angst. Faulkner introduces elements of the bildungsroman, as Chick moves through days and nights without sleep or food, (taking pains to avoid his mother who he assumes would stop him in his tracks) on a quest he doesn’t even fully understand, We actually see surprisingly little of Lucas, but what we do see is very revealing. He is composed, resigned to placing his fate in the hands of a confused boy and an old woman, but somehow above the commotion stirred up by his arrest. For anyone who questions Faulkner’s stance on race relations in Southern society, this book has many of the answers. Like all of his work, it gets better every time I read it. ( )
1 vote laytonwoman3rd | Dec 9, 2019 |
William Faulkner rarely gives us a character easily described as “admirable”. But in Intruder in the Dust, we meet Lucas Beauchamp, a black man whose integrity, strength and moral soundness we simply must admire. He is the focus of the mystery that forms what plot there is in this novel. After being discovered standing over the dead body of a white man, with his recently fired Saturday pistol in his pocket, Lucas is assumed to be the killer of one of the Beat Four Gowries, a seriously bad lot. Enter 16-year-old Charles “Chick” Mallison, who had an enlightening encounter with Lucas when he was 10 or 11 which he has never forgotten, and which has left him considerably unsettled in his mind about Southern culture, race, and his own place in the society he’s about to inherit. Lucas sees Chick and the boy’s uncle, the overeducated lawyer Gavin Stevens, as his only hope of proving the he did not shoot Vinson Gowrie. There follows a grim, nearly farcical, round of grave openings and closings as Chick and his accomplice, Miss Eunice Habersham, attempt to uncover evidence that will prevent either the townspeople or the Beat Four crowd from lynching this man who is the source of so much of his own angst. Faulkner introduces elements of the bildungsroman, as Chick moves through days and nights without sleep or food, (taking pains to avoid his mother who he assumes would stop him in his tracks) on a quest he doesn’t even fully understand, We actually see surprisingly little of Lucas, but what we do see is very revealing. He is composed, resigned to placing his fate in the hands of a confused boy and an old woman, but somehow above the commotion stirred up by his arrest. For anyone who questions Faulkner’s stance on race relations in Southern society, this book has many of the answers. Like all of his work, it gets better every time I read it. ( )
  laytonwoman3rd | Dec 9, 2019 |
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"It was just noon that Sunday morming when the sheriff reached the jail with Lucas Beauchamp though the whole town (the whole county too for that matter) had known since the night before that Lucas had killed a white man."
Quotations
"It's all now you see. Yesterday wont be over until tomorrow and tomorrow began ten thousand years ago. For every Southern boy fourteen years old, not once but whenever he wants it, there is the instant when it's still not yet two oclock on that July afternoon in 1863, the brigades are in position behind the rail fence, the guns are laid and ready in the woods and the furled flags are already loosened to break out and Pickett himself with his long oiled ringlets and his hat in one hand probably and his sword in the other looking up the hill waiting for Longstreet to give the word and it's all in the balance, it hasn't happened yet, it hasn't even begun yet, it not only hasn't begun yet but there is still time for it not to begin..."
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At once an engrossing murder mystery and an unflinching portrait of racial injustice in the Reconstruction South, Intruder in the Dust stands out as a true classic of Southern literature. A classic Faulkner novel which explores the lives of a family of characters in the South. An aging black who has long refused to adopt the black's traditionally servile attitude is wrongfully accused of murdering a white man.

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From the dust jacket of the first edition:
"William Faulkner's seventeenth volume, his first novel to be published since The Hamlet in 1940, searches the conscience of the South. It is a study of murder and the mass mind, of an accused Negro whose guilt or innocence becomes secondary to the larger moral problems of justice itself, of a boy just old enough to find his way into manhood under the stress of conflicting values, of a community suspended momentarily between instinctive decency and bestial, irrevocable action. It is a story of man in his essential nobility but on the verge of repudiating himself in all his reprehensible weakness. In the few fateful hours while a mob gathers, two lads and an old woman search for the truth that may free not only the accused but the community itself. How the find it and all that is revealed to them make far more than a story of suspense and mystery; their discovery, and the rapt reader's too, is a new insight into the relationship between the dominant and the dominated. Intruder in the Dust is a major American novel, distinguished for its penetration, subtlety and gripping narrative power."
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