The Sound and the Fury

The four parts of the novel relate many of the same episodes, each from a different point of view and therefore with emphasis on different themes and events. This interweaving and nonlinear structure makes any true synopsis of the novel difficult, especially since the narrators are all unreliable in their own way, making their accounts not necessarily trustworthy at all times. Also in this novel, Faulkner uses italics to indicate points in each section where the narrative is moving into a significant moment in the past. The use of these italics can be confusing, however, as time shifts are not always marked by the use of italics, and periods of different time in each section do not necessarily stay in italics for the duration of the flashback. Thus, these time shifts can often be jarring and confusing, and require particularly close reading. The general outline of the story is the decline of the Compson family, a once noble Southern family descended from U.S. Civil War hero General Compson. The family falls victim to those vices which Faulkner believed were responsible for the problems in the reconstructed South: racism, avarice, selfishness, and the psychological inability of individuals to become determinants. Over the course of the thirty years or so related in the novel, the family falls into financial ruin, loses its religious faith and the respect of the town of Jefferson, and many of them die tragically.

Price: $20.00
$20.00
Author: 
Faulkner, William; Warren, Robert Penn (Introduction)
Illustrator: 
Dewey, Kenneth Francis
SKU: c19faulkner
Condition Notes: 
Used - Very Good
Size: 
362 Pages
Binding: 
Leather Bound
Publisher: 
The Franklin Library
Publisher Year: 
1979
Category1: 
Books
Category2: 
Literature
Category3: 
Literature>>Novels
Category4: 
Franklin Library