-
William Cuthbert Faulkner (/ˈfɔːknər/;
September 25, 1897 – July 6, 1962) was an
American writer. He is best
known for his
novels and
short stories set...
-
followed by the
Times Literary Supplement review which saw the
novel as "
Faulknerian in its
gentle wryness, and a
freakish imaginative flair reminiscent of...
- 1965,
critic Orville Prescott argued that McCarthy’s
extensive use of
Faulknerian literary devices and
mannerisms in The
Orchard Keeper is “exasperating”...
-
Jonathan Yardley in The New York
Times called McGuane "a
talent of
Faulknerian potential,"
while Saul
Bellow described McGuane as "a
language star."...
- bones; and all they add up to,
shorn of the
slightly self-conscious
Faulknerian poetics of Bradbury's style, is a
dismayingly schoolmarmish moral tale...
- The New York
Times described McCarthy's
prose in
Blood Meridian as "
Faulknerian".
Describing events of
extreme violence, McCarthy's
prose is sp**** yet...
-
includes multiple genres. He
writes in the
Southern Gothic aesthetic in his
Faulknerian 1965 debut, The
Orchard Keeper, and
Suttree (1979); in the Epic Western...
- Mexican-Americans. As an author,
Rivera is best
remembered for his 1971
Faulknerian stream-of-consciousness
novella ...y no se lo tragó la tierra, translated...
-
critic concluded that
blackness and
women were the "'twin
Furies of the
Faulknerian deep
Southern Waste Land'" and
reflected Faulkner's
animosity toward...
-
across a
hawthorn hedge in Proust's À la
recherche du
temps perdu). The
Faulknerian influence is
evident in the novels'
extensive use of a
fractured timeline...