Sartoris is William Faulkner's first major exploration of the Southern legacy that would define much of his later work. Set in the fictional Yoknapatawpha County, this haunting and lyrical novel tells the story of the Sartoris family-once-proud Mississippi aristocrats grappling with a world that no longer values their traditions or their past. At its heart is Young Bayard Sartoris, a reckless war veteran haunted by the death of his twin brother and consumed by a desire to relive the glories and tragedies of his ancestors. As the new South emerges, Bayard's internal battle becomes a symbol of a…mehr
Sartoris is William Faulkner's first major exploration of the Southern legacy that would define much of his later work. Set in the fictional Yoknapatawpha County, this haunting and lyrical novel tells the story of the Sartoris family-once-proud Mississippi aristocrats grappling with a world that no longer values their traditions or their past. At its heart is Young Bayard Sartoris, a reckless war veteran haunted by the death of his twin brother and consumed by a desire to relive the glories and tragedies of his ancestors. As the new South emerges, Bayard's internal battle becomes a symbol of a decaying honor code, lost purpose, and the human cost of clinging to fading grandeur. Faulkner weaves a rich tapestry of memory, myth, and the inexorable march of time, offering a deeply moving portrait of a family-and a region-at a crossroads. Sartoris is both a powerful standalone novel and an essential prelude to Faulkner's later masterpieces.
William Faulkner was a literary force of nature-bold, innovative, and unafraid to wrestle with the deepest complexities of the American South. Born in 1897 in New Albany, Mississippi, Faulkner transformed the Southern Gothic genre and redefined modernist storytelling with a voice as rich and tangled as the landscapes he wrote about. His fictional Yoknapatawpha County became a stage for unforgettable characters, generational trauma, and the slow, haunted rhythms of Southern life.A master of stream-of-consciousness and psychological depth, Faulkner's novels-The Sound and the Fury, As I Lay Dying, Light in August, among others-challenge readers and reward them with profound emotional insight. His ability to explore identity, memory, race, and decay in a fractured and poetic style earned him the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1949, as well as two Pulitzer Prizes.Though often considered a writer's writer, Faulkner's work continues to captivate new generations who are drawn to the beauty and brutality of his prose. Complex, flawed, and fiercely original, William Faulkner didn't just write about the South-he reshaped the way America sees itself.
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