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As I Lay Dying
 
 
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As I Lay Dying [Paperback]

William Faulkner
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (22 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Paperback: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Vintage Classics; New Ed edition (4 Jan 1996)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0099479311
  • ISBN-13: 978-0099479314
  • Product Dimensions: 19.4 x 13 x 2 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (22 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 3,081 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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William Faulkner
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Product Description

Review

For range of effect, philosophical weight, originality of style, variety of characterization, humor, and tragic intensity, [Faulkner's works] are without equal in our time and country --Robert Penn Warren --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Book Description

'Brilliant and compelling-one is constrained to follow to the end' Spectator

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
64 of 70 people found the following review helpful
By Donald Mitchell HALL OF FAME TOP 500 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback
Faulkner's great accomplishment in this novel is to use the most modern fiction techniques to create a timeless allegory that we would probably not accept in a different style. His other great achievement is to leave so much space in the story for us to participate in adding meaning. You have to pay attention to even notice what is going on, and then you can provide a variety of interpretations. This novel will never be the same for any two readers. It is a stunning accomplishment, as a result.

The story begins as Addie Bundren lays dying, fanned by her daughter, while her son makes her coffin. With her husband and five children, we make her acquaintance by learning about their actions and characters. Only once does she have a role as a narrator, and then, quite late in the story.

Her husband, Anse, has promised her that he will bury her with her family. Because of tremendous rains, the river has risen, knocking out bridges and making passage difficult. Despite this, the family perseveres in taking her unembalmed body to the intended burial site. Along the way, there are many mishaps and the family is burdened in many ways by keeping this promise. As the burial comes closer, new elements of the story are exposed and develop that totally recast what you have thought was going on.

The story is a difficult one to read. So read this book when you have time to pay close attention and study the text word by word. Let me explain the difficulties you will encounter. First, the voices in the book use a Southern patois that will be unfamiliar to most. This is the language of the rural poor in the 1930s, which few have heard. Second, the exposition is mostly through thoughts, often expressed in fragmentary form, rather than through action and a smooth narrative. Third, the narration is a partial mosaic of impressions of the characters, jumping back and forth in 2-4 page segments. Their perceptions are partial, and even more partially expressed. Objectivity is shunned by Faulkner. Fourth, Faulkner wants you to fill in the gaps, and the best way to do that is to expose the gaps slowly. Only after 3 or 4 narrations by characters will the gaps begin to emerge in a way you can grasp them. Then, you still have to interpret them.

Few readers will miss the references to Moses and his search for the promised land, and the Christian parable of the Pilgrim's Progress. What is unstated is the connection to reading this book. Many poor Southern people of that time were taught to read with The Pilgrim's Progress as a primer. That experience helped to shape a perception and a sensibility that would influence their actions, and thus, this tale. That connection creates a wonderful series of circles here that build on one another.

At bottom though, it is clear from this book that there are secrets of the heart that are never exposed in public. When we come close to dying (our own or someone else's), these secrets begin to rise closer to the surface where we (and sometimes others) can see them.

Faulkner has one quirk in the book that I urge you to look for. While he is often conveying the thoughts of uneducated people, he will drop in magnificent phrases that are worthy of Shakespeare. He wants you to know that he is a learned man, hiding behind his humble bards. That pride creates flaws in the book, but flaws that are a delight to the reader, nevertheless. In fact, he takes this one step further by employing many of Shakespeare's favorite techniques from foreshadowing through nature's fury through using fools.

After you have read this book, I encourage you to consider what secret desires, actions, fears, and thoughts you have which you keep buried even from yourself. Then consider the potential benefits of making these known, before you lay dying.

Also, whenever things seem confused, consider how others may be perceiving what is going on. Like Vardeman, they too may think their mother is a fish. Accept their view of reality, and communicate in terms of that perception if you want to make contact. Otherwise, you will be alone even in the middle of your family, as the Bundrens were in As I Lay Dying.

Enjoy this American masterpiece! I think you'll find it irresistible and moving.

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30 of 33 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Paperback
This is a compelling novel, as well as a literary masterpiece.

The death of Addie Bundren in the country, and the desparately hard and bitter journey to bury her in the town of Jefferson, is told primarily through the voices of her husband and five children. The force of the novel comes through the narrative structure - by employing the different voices of his characters, Faulkner paints a vivid picture of the time, the country and, particularly powerfully, the hostilities and bonds within the family.

The plot is delicately unravelled and wholly satisfying. Any reader - with a passion for reading - will find this book gripping and profoundly affecting.

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35 of 39 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Paperback
This is a truly exceptional book. Faulkner takes the fragmentary narrative approach of 'The Sound and The Fury' to its logical conclusion in this astonishing book, in which we see through the eyes of virtually every character. The most strikingly modern approach to charcterisation I've ever read, and this in a novel published in 1930! I think it is Faulkner's best work.

If you want a novel that will rejuvenate your love of literature, then read this book.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Darkness on the edge of Town!
This is a classic of American Literature, a novel that I wouldn't have read had it not been chosen by our book club. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Cassander
A Classic
I bought this book on recommendation in the "Vintage Faulkner" edition. In reality, it deserves to be rated as a "classic" and one not to be missed by the avid reader. Read more
Published 6 months ago by V G Harwood
A perfect introduction to Faulkner
'As I Lay Dying' was the first William Faulkner novel I ever read, and I would still recommend it as the ideal entry point for a new reader. Read more
Published 7 months ago by TomM1975
Persevere, it's worth it!
This powerful and relatively brief novel, written from many different viewpoints, is about the tribulations of an American family before and following the death of the mother. Read more
Published 11 months ago by Marjorie
a tough read
This book is supposed to be one of the American classics of the 20th century. We did this book for Book Club and it didn't go down too well. Read more
Published 12 months ago by D. Lawry
Grim humour to die for...
This is one of Faulkner's very best. I love the imagery - of which Faulkner is a master - and the black comedy of it all makes it one of my two fav Faulkner books.
Published 13 months ago by Izzy Garland
As I Lay Dying by William Faulkner
It's been some time since reading a novel that struck me so, what with the characters so varied in age and perspective but ultimately cursed with the same limited empathy for those... Read more
Published 14 months ago by K. Donnan
as i lay dying
faulkner sets humanity in poetry more in this novel than in any of his others. i first read the book more than 50 years ago and coming back to it now, it remains just as fresh and... Read more
Published 21 months ago by Mr. Moshe Elias
A brilliant and inventive novel
At first I wasn't sure about this book, with its multiple voices and rough southern vernacular, but I soon grew to appreciate the incredible vitality of it, the immediacy of the... Read more
Published on 14 Mar 2010 by Phil O'Sofa
An admirable and impressive book but not quite the emotionally...
Faulkner was a Nobel Prize winner and wrote `As I Lay Dying' early in his authorial career in six summer weeks in 1929 during night-shift work at a local power station. Read more
Published on 15 Dec 2009 by Andy Miller
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