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Loading... As I Lay Dying: The Corrected Text (Modern Library)by William Faulkner
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. Weird, weird book. I hope this review has been helpful. ( )http://nwhyte.livejournal.com/1351340... Intense stream-of-consciousness tale of a poor Mississippi family, fulfilling their wife and mother's dying wish to be buried in her inconveniently distant home town. The family dynamics are weird and understated, and the time sequencing is occasionally jarring between the dozen or so different narrators. But the various voices feel very authentic, consistent in word and thought, and it feels like Faulkner supplied a stylistic model that others have followed (it reminded me of both Orson Scott Card and Terry Bisson, two authors from opposite ends of the ideological spectrum). An absorbing and somewhat disturbing book. On the surface, this is simple Faulkner, what with its short chapters and paragraphs, although it can still be just as confusing at times as Benji's opening section of The Sound and the Fury. For a student or anyone else who has just struggled through a first reading of The Sound and the Fury or Absalom Absalom, it would be easy to miss some of the nuance and deeper meaning in the narrative. Definitely worth a re-read. Quit reading after 40 pages. The language was too colloquial and difficult to follow. I couldn't figure out who was who. I can imagine that it would be good but I just didn't have the patience to get thru it. I probably need to read more Faulkner, as The Sound & The Fury was incredible, and this book was almost as good. His prose has great rhythms and I like the weird stylistics ticks (ending a chapter in the middle of a sentence, the use of italics) even if I'm not immediately sure what to make of them. no reviews | add a review
Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 067973225X, Paperback)Faulkner's distinctive narrative structures--the uses of multiple points of view and the inner psychological voices of the characters--in one of its most successful incarnations here in As I Lay Dying. In the story, the members of the Bundren family must take the body of Addie, matriarch of the family, to the town where Addie wanted to be buried. Along the way, we listen to each of the members on the macabre pilgrimage, while Faulkner heaps upon them various flavors of disaster. Contains the famous chapter completing the equation about mothers and fish--you'll see.(retrieved from Amazon Tue, 05 Jan 2010 13:41:44 -0500) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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