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{"id":14,"date":"2013-09-13T16:16:09","date_gmt":"2013-09-13T16:16:09","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/williamfaulkner.com\/?page_id=14"},"modified":"2013-09-13T16:16:09","modified_gmt":"2013-09-13T16:16:09","slug":"william-faulkner-a-southern-tempest-of-words-and-whiskey","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/williamfaulkner.com\/","title":{"rendered":"William Faulkner: A Southern Tempest of Words and Whiskey"},"content":{"rendered":"

\"img\"American writer and novelist William Faulkner, born Falkner, made his foray into the literary world with poetry but gained prominence for his novels set in the ethereal Yoknapatawpha County in the Deep South, in particular his novel \u201cSartoris.\u201d<\/p>\n

William Faulkner is now considered one of the greatest American Southern literature writers, though he was a relative unknown for much of his career until he received a Nobel Prize for Literature in 1949.<\/p>\n

Faulkner, who dropped out of school and took odd jobs at a bank and for a carpenter, had a variety of success including an adaptation of his \u201cSanctuary\u201d novel \u2013 at that time very controversial \u2013 into a full feature film by a Hollywood studio. His \u201cThe Sound and the Fury\u201d rests as the sixth-best English-language novel of the 20th century according to the Modern Library.<\/p>\n

He was born in Oxford, Mississippi on September 25, 1897 and would die on July 6, 1962, of a heart attack in Byhalia, Mississippi. Shortly before his death, he went on to win a second Pulitzer Prize for Fiction for \u201cThe Reivers.\u201d<\/p>\n

He was posthumously awarded a National Book Award for his \u201cCollected Stories.\u201d<\/p>\n

Writing Style and Publications<\/h2>\n

While his early works centered on poetry and drawing, Faulkner began writing novels and short stories in the early 1920s. This poetry background is credited for Faulkner breaking from the conventions of his day by using a longer cadence and deeper diction.<\/p>\n

Instead of adopting the popular minimalist style, Faulkner applied a \u201cstream of consciousness\u201d style that includes emotional appeals, subtle weaving of themes throughout multiple stories, incredibly complex character motivations, and sometimes grotesque (in the dark, literary sense) themes.<\/p>\n

Faulkner was not afraid to deal with Southern concerns and social politics that were still fresh in the minds of U.S. citizens. These portrayals added a breadth to American understanding of the multifaceted influences behind the class structure of the South: from former slaves and their children to whites who were poor, farmers, lower-middle class or Southern aristocrats.<\/p>\n

His first two novels were written in New Orleans and the house he worked in at, 624 Pirate’s Alley, is now the home of Faulkner House Books. It is a short distance from the famous St. Louis Cathedral, which biographer Randy Nelson said provided him some inspirations in the early days.<\/p>\n

He crafted and published 13 novels from 1920 through the start of World War II, a break-neck speed that included some of his most famous novels:<\/p>\n