Author - William Faulkner
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William Faulkner (1897–1962) reshaped American literature through bold experimentation with voice, time, and regional identity. He drew deeply from the American South to explore memory, guilt, class, and moral decay, crafting stories that challenged narrative convention and demanded active engagement from readers. His work earned the Nobel Prize in Literature and permanently altered the possibilities of the modern novel.
As I Lay Dying opens with urgency and intimacy as William Faulkner plunges readers into a family bound by duty, denial, and relentless motion. The novel announces its intent immediately by refusing comfort, clarity, or a single truth, instead demanding the reader confront grief as lived experience rather than sentiment.
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