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Sound and the Fury: The Corrected Text
Sound and the Fury: The Corrected Text | William Faulkner
I give you the mausoleum of all hope and desire. . . . I give it to you not that you may remember time, but that you might forget it now and then for a moment and not spend all of your breath trying to conquer it. Because no battle is ever won he said. They are not even fought. The field only reveals to man his own folly and despair, and victory is an illusion of philosophers and fools. from "The Sound and the Fury" "The Sound and the Fury" is the tragedy of the Compson family, featuring some of the most memorable characters in literature: beautiful, rebellious Caddy; the manchild Benjy; haunted, neurotic Quentin; Jason, the brutal cynic; and Dilsey, their black servant. Their lives fragmented and harrowed by history and legacy, the character s voices and actions mesh to create what is arguably Faulkner s masterpiece and one of the greatest novels of the twentieth century."
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review
Graywacke
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Pickpick

This was a nice step into Faulkner's best stuff. I loved the book, and was enraptured by the Benjy section.

He's mute and mentally compromised and can only moan. But he observes everything. He watches and feels, but can't interact or express his feelings. He's like a reader. And he floats through time, weaving the present and past in meaningful ways. He catches everything essential, and much that is beautiful and he senses all this.

Graywacke Note: When you open this book, you can vaguely sift out golf in the distance, but suddenly Luster, Bengy‘s caretaker, is gone and there are other people around and Benjy seems different. It's confusing and can be frustrating. Timelines are changing. Confused and intrigued I looked up some guidance online and got this very simple set of guidelines 👇 7mo
Graywacke
1. Pay attention to Benjy's caretaker. When Versh is taking care of Benjy, he is around 3 to 5 years old. When it's T.P., Benjy is a teenager. When it's Luster, Benjy is 33
2. There are two Quentins - Benjy's suicidal brother and his promiscuous niece.
3. Bengy is named Maury at birth, after his uncle, but his mother insists that they change it after discovering his mental disability.
7mo
Graywacke So I had read 30 pages, amused and confused. After finding these guidelines, I went back to the beginning, and what I got was magical. Some of the best reading I've ever had. 7mo
See All 11 Comments
AmyG I read this-was SO confused-then read it again with sparknotes-and was blown away. 7mo
Graywacke @AmyG yes! That‘s like the same experience i had. Once it clicks, it‘s really gorgeous 7mo
sarahbarnes I remember being blown away by this in a class in college, and I‘m guessing I only grasped a fraction of it then. 7mo
SamAnne I was glad to read this one in a Goodreads group with some Faulkner aficionados. 7mo
Suet624 I own this and have put off reading it. So glad to get your notes. Clearly they‘ll be helpful. 7mo
Graywacke @sarahbarnes I definitely only got some things, some impressions. Faulkner often isn‘t friendly to single readings. But i loved what i got. 7mo
Graywacke @SamAnne nice. I want to read with that kind of group. Adds so much. 7mo
Graywacke @Suet624 you know, you have to stumble through about 80 pages. There‘s no other way. Actually i stumbled through 30. Then googled and restarted. That worked nicely. But forgive yourself for that first lost attempt. The second time through (part 1) can get some magic 7mo
56 likes11 comments
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Graywacke
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Started today. And after reading a couple notes…looks like I‘ll need to read that part over again.

dabbe Kudos to you. I‘ve never been able to make it through the first chapter. 😂 8mo
Graywacke @dabbe well, let‘s see how it goes. 🙂 8mo
vivastory I haven't read this one, but I read Light In August a couple of years ago & still think about it a lot. 8mo
Graywacke @vivastory i‘ll get there! 🙂 I‘m fascinated by the opening here 8mo
43 likes4 comments
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Schwifty
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Panpan

Was stream of consciousness the fad of the 1920s? I get that it might have been new and innovative and a tool to convey perspective, but I absolutely loathe it. I didn‘t like To The Lighthouse for that reason and this is worse. The first two chapters are written this way and are very difficult to follow. The third chapter is written in first person and the fourth and final chapter is written in third person. Each follows a different character.

Schwifty I actually had to read the Wikipedia entry for this novel to gain a sense of what was happening and the reason for the crazy structure. I wasn‘t a fan, but I persevered. But seriously, don‘t try to read this without studying the cliff notes first. 10mo
7 likes1 comment
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Pip2
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Mehso-so

I‘m not a strong advocate for the writings of William Faulkner, as it is clear that the authors close minded views are developed within the framework of his work. Racially biased and strong stereotypical attitudes are often purported throughout, but also have a contradictory and opposite effect on what the author was trying to portray of displaying how short sighted the post civil war south was, ie segregation, Jim Crow, & the lack of humanity.

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GinaKButler
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Here we go! April‘s #bookspin and #doublespin! Thank you for hosting, @TheAromaofBooks 😊

Amiable Oh, I so enjoyed “The Boys in the Boat”! 3y
TheAromaofBooks Woohoo!!! 3y
28 likes2 comments
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arubabookwoman
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Embarking on reading this #20thCenturyClassics. @Butterfinger @jmofo @sprainedbrain I 1st read it in college freshman English class in 1968. I can't imagine reading it the 1st time w/o some sort of guidance. Pictured is my shelf copy of the book, acquired in 1968 for my class. In it I found the chronological guide the prof provided us (on the right), and my handwritten family genealogy for the Compson family (left).

arubabookwoman I've reread The Sound and the Fury 3 times since 1968, so this will be a 4th reread. It's a favorite. I also love most of the other Faulkner's I've read, esp. the other novel of the Compson family, Absalom, Absalom. 3y
peacegypsy I love that you have your college notes! 3y
29 likes2 comments
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sprainedbrain
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Pickpick

Another read for our 20th century classics group. This one was a hard read for me, but I persevered, and it was a pick in the end. I had to do some supplemental reading about this book along the way—felt like school again, but it helped.

Definitely southern, clearly well-written, but quite brutal. I felt horrible for Benjy and Caddy, had such hopes for poor Quentin, and Jason… omg I can‘t remember hating a character so.

#1001books

⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2

Graywacke What did you use to help you through it? 3y
sprainedbrain @Graywacke Sparknotes, the wiki page, and Google! 3y
Graywacke @sprainedbrain ok, thank you! 3y
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bio_chem06 Is this a group I can join? I can‘t force myself to read the classics without a little nudge from others 🤣 3y
sprainedbrain @bio_chem06 haha I get it! The 4 of us actually did a round of LMPBC together years ago, and we chose to read 20th century classics. Then we resurrected the group for another round earlier this year, though not on the usual schedule for LMPBC. If you do LMPBC, maybe we could start a group of folks that want to read classics? 3y
bio_chem06 @sprainedbrain I‘m down for a group like that! If it seems like a group wants to get together, please include me. 3y
85 likes6 comments
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plemmdog
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It‘s Faulkner's birthday. He was postmaster at the University of Mississippi from 1921-24, neglectful of his duties, and finally resigned. Upon his dismissal, he said: "I reckon I'll be at the beck and call of folks with money all my life, but thank God I won't ever again have to be at the beck and call of every s.o.b. who's got two cents to buy a stamp." He is the only person to have been fired as post master and later receive his own stamp.

Leftcoastzen 😄excellent! 3y
13 likes1 comment
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Daisey
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Mehso-so

This is a hard one for me to rate. It‘s definitely a challenging & interesting read that requires focus & effort to comprehend. I listened completely, listened to parts again, did some reading about the book, and I‘m still not completely satisfied on some points. I don‘t read to be presented with a complex puzzle; I want most of the questions answered by the end. I can‘t say that I actually enjoyed this reading experience.

#1001books #audiobook

Daisey @TheAromaofBooks This is my August #DoubleSpin Book 2. 3y
JazzFeathers One of those books, eh? 3y
TheAromaofBooks Great progress!!! 3y
sprainedbrain I relate to this review SO MUCH. 3y
Daisey @sprainedbrain I just saw your review too. I can appreciate the writing, but I don‘t generally want reading to be that much work!! 3y
53 likes5 comments
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Daisey
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I don‘t generally enjoy stream of consciousness and this is so much of that, but I am determined to keep listening and hopefully figure out what is going on in the end. That might include reading more about it as I finish and even listening again to some sections. It helps to read reviews from others I trust that did some of the same and say it‘s worth it.

#1001books #audiobook

SamAnne Oh, I don‘t think I could have followed this one on audio. Read it last year for the first time. 3y
Daisey @SamAnne I‘m coming back to this now that I‘ve finished. It wasn‘t easy, and I had to be more even selective about what else I was doing while listening than normal. However, I don‘t really think I would have followed much better in print. After a first listen, I went back and listened to a long section at the beginning again and it made much more sense. 3y
46 likes2 comments
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jmofo
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Pickpick

I was intimidated by this book even though it‘s got nearly #allthethingsifellforasayoungerreader …I read some reviews and someone said they really struggled until they read the wiki article on the book. My young self would be ashamed to admit it but I‘m not: I read the wiki. I don‘t think it took away from my enjoyment (?) of the book knowing wth.
This photo is a bit irreverent for the subject matter but appropriate on a few levels.
Lots of cw‘s

Butterfinger Great review. 3y
jmofo @Butterfinger thank you! It‘s a tricky one to review with such little space and not wishing to spoil for our friends! 3y
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jmofo
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“There were about a dozen watches in the window, a dozen different hours and each with the same assertive and contradictory assurance mine had, without any hands at all. Contradicting one another. I could hear mine, ticking away inside my pocket, even though nobody could see it, even though it could tell nothing if anyone could.”

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Blueberry
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Jennaree3
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Alternating those classics, but plowing through the summer stack of reads…

CarolineLovesToRead love the mug!
4y
32 likes1 comment
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Butterfinger
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Pickpick

This was an engrossing read. A study of a family who is stuck in the old ways - I am better than everyone else because I am... So entitled and so absurd. Warning for racist views - I think it is Faulkner's way to show the absurdity and the cruelty of some Southerners in the early 1900s. @sprainedbrain @jmofo @arubabookwoman

Butterfinger And I need to add - that it is a shame that there is still the same obnoxious and cruel behavior in the South - where I live. 4y
jmofo Your description makes me feel like I understand the title. I‘m glad you picked this, I‘m looking forward to reading it! 4y
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Kristelh
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BarbaraBB A first edition? Wow 🤩 4y
Kristelh @BarbaraBB I didn‘t have the first edition but my drawing was from first edition found on Wikipedia 4y
BarbaraBB You drawing? Wow too 😄 4y
Kristelh 😊 thanks 4y
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Mccall0113
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I am posting one book a day from my extensive collection of books. No explanation of why I have this book. Man, I have a lot of books! Join in the fun. #tbrpile day #6

IamIamIam I put this on my library wish list because I swear I've read it but I just don't remember!!! Lol 4y
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Hamlet
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“Toni Morrison, his fellow Nobel Laureate, wrote that she read Faulkner to ‘find out about this country and that artistic articulation of its past that was not available in history, which is what art and fiction can do but history sometimes refuses to do.‘” (Quotation from an 8/25/2020 NYTimes review by Ayana Mathis of a Faulkner biography. The picture is by Timothy Greenfield-Sanders for Morrison‘s novel “A Mercy.”)

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Hamlet
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Pickpick

I decided to reread this book after noting Toni Morrison‘s comments on it. It portrays the dissolution of white-persons‘ plantation mentality through the decline of one family. The experimental writing has circling, layered mysteries. I admire his attempt to show the mind of a mentally handicapped man. Faulkner has his own racism though, & a troubling lack of focus on Black characters & (ironically) the female lead. A troubling, important book.

Suet624 It‘s sitting on my shelf waiting to be read. 4y
10 likes1 comment
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marleed
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Pickpick

I‘m glad I finally read this but it is one heck of a depressing hard-to-comprehend story. I had to stop and read about the book to get a better understanding before continuing with it. Jason Compson may be one of my top 5 least favorite antagonists. I didn‘t find a minute of enjoyment in not liking him.

MegaWhoppingCosmicBookwyrm Love your photo! 😍 4y
SamAnne I read it this year as well. Complicated read. I read with a Goodreads classics book group which helped. Plan to read more Faulkner. 4y
GinaKButler This is on my bookshelf to pick up...I may have to check the Cliff Notes out of the library when I read it...I did that with As I Lay Dying. 😊 4y
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Cathythoughts Great picture 4y
Kenyazero This composition is too fun! 4y
ValerieAndBooks Great picture! Yes this is definitely a challenging read. 4y
marleed @MegaWhoppingCosmicBookwyrm @Cathythoughts @Kenyazero @ValerieAndBooks Thank you. Yesterday someone posted a funny short video clip of my son. He‘s the director of photography for an ad agency. His wife was posting something and caught his exasperation at her effort - ‘You have to mute the TV, consider your lighting‘. I cracked up because I saw it when I was taking this pic and wondered if my lighting would pass his judgement! 4y
marleed @GinaKButler @SamAnne @ValerieAndBooks This book definitely was a note to self: Some books I need to read as if I‘m watching a play - where I read the upcoming scenes in the play notes so I can fully appreciate what‘s about to happen. 4y
MegaWhoppingCosmicBookwyrm @marleed Too funny! 😅❤️ 4y
ReadingisMyPassion I remember reading that book when I was in high school. Heavy reading!
4y
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SamAnne
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Pickpick

My first Faulkner. A masterful novel. I will read more of him. But I need a break from characters that embody privileged white male rage.

Ericalambbrown If you want to read a Faulkner from the perspective “poor white trash” (as much as I loathe that term, they are my ancestral people, so there it is . . . ) rather than the privileged might I suggest (edited) 5y
SamAnne @Ericalambbrown thanks for the suggestion! And yes, my ancestors as well... 5y
Ladygodiva7 This was a great read for me! 5y
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Taylor
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Pickpick

Just finished this on a reread.

Anyone who‘s tackled it knows it‘s a richly intense novel, with so many layers that it‘s truly one you could read year after year and keep gaining from it. It‘s also difficult, very much so. But oh so worth it. An unimaginably epic tragicomedy, IMO it should be on everyone‘s “read before they die” list.

Texreader What an incredible review. 5y
Taylor @Texreader Thanks for the nice words! 🙏 5y
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Qpri
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Just about managed to get through this one- hats off to kids who read it for school!
Now doodling and propagating some plants, to clear my head of all the random words without grammar or punctuation...

wordslinger42 What a pretty drawing! 💜 5y
Qpri @wordslinger42 Thank you! This is a little bookstore in my head ☺️ 5y
19 likes2 comments
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Taylor

He looked at his watch. Then he went to the door and looked at the courthouse clock. “You ought to have a dollar watch,” I says. “It won‘t cost you so much to believe it‘s lying each time.”

😂

SamAnne LOL. I just read that sentence this morning! 5y
Taylor @SamAnne Really?? Now that is weird. 5y
SamAnne I‘m reading it along with a Goodreads classics group. Boy that Benji section is crazy disturbing....but so is the Quentin storyline. First time reading Faulkner. He‘s been on my TBR list for awhile. (edited) 5y
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Taylor @SamAnne I just reread it! It‘s one of my top favorite novels. What‘d you find disturbing about the Benjy section? 5y
SamAnne @Taylor Now that I'm 3/4 the section on Quentin, I'd say it's all a disturbing novel! And I am really enjoying it. But unsettling, hard parts of the story include just the Benji story line (castration, etc). So beautifully done with the stream-of-consciousness, the playing with time and sequence. And the whole Caddie storyline. She doesn't even get a section in the novel., a voice. 5y
SamAnne @Taylor and then the whole woman on the pedestal, purity, virginity, etc and what the plays in the lives of the male family members around her, how much they rely on her playing that role--mother, sister, virgin. And what happens when she's not able to, or unwilling to play that archtype. 5y
Taylor @SamAnne Yeah those are all good points you make. 5y
SamAnne @taylor and I‘m really enjoying it. I will be reading more Faulkner! 5y
Taylor @SamAnne He‘s my favorite author. This one, “Absalom, Absalom!” and also the Snopes trilogy are the ones. I haven‘t read “The Hamlet” or “A Fable” but I should. 5y
SamAnne @taylor what‘s your recommendation on the next novel of his I should read? 5y
Taylor @SamAnne “As I Lay Dying”! And then “Absalom, Absalom!” and then maybe the snopes trilogy, or you could try those other two I mentioned that I haven‘t read. 5y
3 likes11 comments
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SamAnne
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Glad I have a stiff gin drink and a well-versed Goodreads group to tackle this Faulkner read. Getting the hang of the stream-of-consciousness writing!

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Qpri
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I‘ve been slow with this one... But hoping to change that over the weekend. Happy Friday everyone!🌻

Crazeedi Pretty! 5y
Qpri @Crazeedi ☺️☺️🌻 5y
SamAnne Just started this week and am trying to make sense of the Benji chapter.... 5y
Qpri @SamAnne 🙌 ditto I‘m on the Benji portion too... 5y
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ReadingEnvy
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Mehso-so

I read the words of this book but I'm not exactly sure what I read. I have this image of all of Faulkner's characters in these repeat loops and the end harkening back to the beginning did not help this impression! Super disappointed to miss the class discussion on this one but As I Lay Dying is next, so even if I feel I need to discuss and start again, instead I move onward....

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GinaKButler
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Just added a new Catching Up On The Classics Reading Challenge Sticker Set to the shop! I needed a little push to crack open some of the classics on my TBR! #theplanningbutler #theplanningbutlerreads

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Leftcoastzen
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#DearDecember #BlackGoldCover I love Franklin Library leather editions.I only buy them used at library sales .

Eggs Exquisite 👏🏻🤗👏🏻 5y
Suet624 So pretty! 5y
LeahBergen That‘s where I get them, too. 😆 5y
43 likes3 comments
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ImperfectCJ
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Some of the books I #readinhighschool that are still in my home library. It hadn't occurred to me how few women authors I read in school until I saw this lineup. I especially loved Hemingway and Faulkner back then. I thought I was the cat's pajamas when I finally figured out how to read The Sound and the Fury.

#GratefulReads Day 21
@Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks @OriginalCyn620

OriginalCyn620 🙌🏼📚❤️ 5y
39 likes1 comment
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Paperback.Propensity
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I bought a used book listed as "in good condition" but I beg to differ.
I certainly don't mind annotations, but if part of a page is missing, how could I read it?

BoleyBooks 😢 I‘ve known this frustration. 5y
Paperback.Propensity @BoleyBooks So disappointing 5y
BoleyBooks I wish I owned a copy to send pics of what you are missing. Hugs. 5y
Paperback.Propensity @BoleyBooks Thank you, that is a very kind thought. I emailed the seller to see if they have another copy by any chance. 5y
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Caterina
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My brother walked in on me reading this and I said I was enjoying it and he said "wow, it must be really good for you to be enjoying a book by an old dead white man" and I'm just so proud of how much my reading habits have changed to reflect my values in recent years ? ?
#newyearwhodis @Emilymdxn @monalyisha

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Caterina
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Front porch reading 🥰 Earlier there was a spring/summer rain shower and it smelled like heaven, and now the sky is blue and the sun is shining 💕
Totally absorbed by this book, I can hardly put it down @Emilymdxn #newyearwhodis @monalyisha

Emilymdxn So glad you‘re enjoying it! 6y
Caterina @Emilymdxn So glad you put it on the list! 😊 It could've been many years before I read it otherwise, since it wasn't on my immediate TBR, even though I loved Faulkner in high school. 6y
Samplergal I loved Light in August. I still haven‘t read this one. 6y
jewright I like Faulkner. I think my favorite is As I Lay Dying. 6y
44 likes3 stack adds4 comments
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Caterina
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Started this today after finishing the Association of Small Bombs last night! (Which was fantastic and fixed my reading slump) I will readily admit to using Sparknotes to figure out Benjy's chapter, but I also loved the chapter and am totally hooked. So excited to finally be reading this! I loved the Unvanquished when I read it in high school. #newyearwhodis @Emilymdxn @monalyisha

robinb 👏👏👏👏Faulkner is not for the faint of heart! 😊Enjoy! 6y
36 likes1 comment
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ValerieAndBooks
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My next #1001Books. Wish me luck! I tried reading this back when Oprah‘s Book Club had the “Summer of Faulkner”, but DNF. Maybe this time will be better?!

LeahBergen I‘ve had this waiting on my shelf for years! 😬 6y
LauraJ Not an easy read. 6y
ValerieAndBooks @LeahBergen it probably can wait a little longer 😬!! 6y
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ValerieAndBooks @LauraJ you are so right! I have no idea what‘s going on. I had to look up background info online and probably will have to again and again 🧐 6y
DivineDiana I remember “The Summer of Faulkner”! Not my favorite choice for Oprah. I read 2 of the 3 chosen, but don‘t remember which ones? 🤔 6y
KimHM Stick with it, it is soooo worth it. One of my top faves 💙📚💙📚 6y
Liz_M I am not entirely sure "getting it" is the point. Especially the first section narrated by Benjy. Maybe try reading it for language and mood and then go back, after the later sections, to see how it fits together. 6y
ValerieAndBooks @DivineDiana That summer, I did read and finish (it was easier to get through) 6y
ValerieAndBooks @KimHM @Liz_M still reading this; language and mood are definitely amazing. But at the same time it‘s a challenge 😊 6y
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Jamesmelvinmitchell
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Pickpick

This is my favorite book by my favorite author not an easy read takes some effort but totally worth it. If you‘re just starting on his work try Absalom Absalom it‘s great too. These two books are considered the best books by Southern writers.

AmyG Brilliant book. I had to read it twice to fully understand it. 6y
Jamesmelvinmitchell @AmyG yes this was my 2nd also. I love reads like this that make you work for it. 6y
50 likes2 comments
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JLaurenceCohen

This is Faulkner's most widely read novel. It tells the story of the Compson family's disintegration through four different narrators. It requires multiple readings, but it's a fun puzzle.

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gradcat
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1. The Sound and the Fury - William Faulkner 📖
2. Other than Shakespeare...Anita Shreve 📝
3. Movie - Sunset Boulevard; TV show - Seinfeld 📺
4. Spanakopita 🥬

Happy Monday, all!
#ManicMonday
#letterS
@JoScho

JoScho Oh I love spanakopita! 6y
Velvetfur I just had to Google that food, and it looks delicious! 6y
gradcat @JoScho @Velvetfur It‘s so yummy, but not easy to make...but it‘s worth all the work! 6y
Velvetfur @gradcat I'll have to look for a Greek restaurant then! 😂 6y
gradcat @Velvetfur Yup, that‘s easiest 😂😂😂 6y
62 likes5 comments
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JessNevertheless
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Panpan

My first finished and definitely last Faulkner. 😒 #litsyclassics

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aebus
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Pickpick

Going down as one of the best books I‘ve ever read. Through the eyes of three brothers, we get to see the demise of a Southern family‘s final generation. Both style and sense of chronology shift as you meet the three narrators, each unreliable and stress-inducing in his own way. #litsyclassics

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JessNevertheless
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Anyone else love literary allusions in titles of books? The Sound and the Fury might be of my favorites (from Macbeth Act 5 Scene 5). Curious to see other people's favorites, so let me know in the comments below! #titleallusions

65 likes4 comments
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TheSpineView
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@Jess7 #readingresolutions

Prompt: Brothers

Here are two classic novels about brothers. Sorry to say I have no brothers to post a picture of.

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IljaRianca
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I started this as the first book of the 1001 book challenge. I don't really read classics and want to change that. I only read 4 books of the whole list! It's quite strange! So far it's about a mentally handicapped man of 33 and his family. The story changes from the present to memories of the past and back without any warning, so that makes it difficult to follow.

#1001books #classics

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CoveredInRust
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.....maybe Faulkner isn't for me.

Schlinkles Agreed 6y
Zelma Not for me either. And I am totally ok with that! 6y
2BR02B I wasn't a fan of this book, but may try another by him at some point. 6y
CoveredInRust @2BR02B This is my third. :/ Just not my writer, I think. 6y
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Quirkybookworm
Mehso-so

I‘m torn on this...I believe this isn‘t one of his best. It‘s giving me a lot to ponder over for a while.

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Rebesta
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I have studied William Faulkner with a southern Faulkner scholar and was wondering if anyone wanted to start a reading group based on his books, especially The Sound and the Fury and Absalom, Absalom! I could answer questions and possibly guide others through the text as well as offer insights into some of his symbolism and techniques. Leave a comment if interested, and we‘ll figure out how to do it.

rather_be_reading welcome to litsy!! 📚🎉📚 @LitsyWelcomeWagon 6y
Jamesmelvinmitchell Did you start a group? I would be interested sorry I didn‘t see your post. Let me know please. 6y
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Rebesta I‘m sorry I haven‘t responded sooner. I tried to start a group, but you‘re the only one who has shown interest. I guess we can discuss it together if you want. 6y
SamAnne Guess I‘m two years too late LOL. Reading Sound and the Fury and enjoying it. 5y
Rebesta @SamAnne - Sorry. I just saw this. Are you still reading? Do you want to discuss? 5y
7 likes6 comments
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Quirkybookworm
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Been ages since I‘ve read his books. I believe I haven‘t read this one yet.

RadicalReader @Quirkybookworm gorgeous book cover 6y
EH2018 I liked As I Lay Dying, never read this one though I probably should... 6y
Jonathon This is one of my most favorite books! Tbh, of the Faulkner that I‘ve read (approx. 7-8 books), I‘m torn between this one or Absalom, Absalom! for my favorite. A gorgeous, heart-renching story, beautifully told. 6y
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Chocamanda I LOVE this book! I read it in college and it has stuck with me. 6y
KathyWheeler I know a lot of people who hate this book but I loved it! Also, Absalom, Absalom. 6y
AmyG This author blows my mind. I needed spark notes to understand this book....and I just loved it. 6y
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toofondofbooks
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Ericalambbrown
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There are few things as pleasant to me as the scent of #honeysuckle on the breeze and the sound of tree frogs at dusk #happyplace #goodnightyall

tracey38 Honeysuckle always reminds me of my childhood. Love it! 7y
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