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Brief Description:
"Through the monologues of a dying mother's children and neighbors, William Faulkner explores the emotional complexities of loss and existence, raising the fundamental question of what it truly means to live"-- Provided by publisher.
Biographical Note:
Nobel Proze winner William Cuthbert Faulkner was born in Mississippi in 1897 in Mississippi and made the South the center of his great novels, from
The Sound and the Fury to
As I Lay Dying and
Light in August. Faulkner wrote novels, short stories, a play, poetry, essays, and screenplays.
Publisher Marketing:
Addie Bundren, a gravely ill mother of five--Cash, Darl, Jewel, Dewey Dell, and Vardaman--voices her wish to be laid to rest with her birth family in Jefferson, the capital of Yoknapatawpha County. William Faulkner examines the complexities of grief and ingeniously portrays the emotional turmoil of multiple narrators through the monologues of her children and neighbors after her passing. From the building of the coffin to the transport of the body, Faulkner's profound exploration of mortality offers a unique and compelling perspective on loss and existence in a richly woven tale highlighting the absurdities and hardships of life in rural Mississippi. This classic read encourages us to reflect on the intricate dynamics between personal desires and shared goals and raises the fundamental question of what it truly means to live.
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Author: Faulkner, William
Publisher: Dover Publications
Binding: Paperback
Pub Date: 2026-02-17
BISAC: Fiction|Classics|Fiction|Family Life|General|Fiction|Southern|Fiction|Literary|Fiction|Psychological
Subjects: Burial|Death|Mississippi|Domestic fiction|Novels|Fiction
Weight: 0.29 lbs
ISBN: 9780486855349
ASIN: -
SKU: SP-9780486855349