William Faulkner bibliography

William Faulkner (1897—1962)[1] was an American writer who won the 1949 Nobel Prize in Literature. He is best known for his novels and short stories set in the fictional Yoknapatawpha County, a stand-in for his hometown of Oxford in Lafayette County, Mississippi.

William Faulkner is widely considered the greatest writer of Southern literature, and one of the most esteemed writers of American literature.

Faulkner made his debut as a published writer at the age of 21 with the poem "L'Après-midi d'un Faune", which appeared in The New Republic on August 6, 1919. Two more poems, "Cathay" and "Sapphics" and a short story, "Landing in Luck", were published in Mississippian in November 1919.[2] Many of his earliest works as a student were published in other University of Mississippi publications. While living in New Orleans in 1925, Faulkner published over a dozen short stories in The Times-Picayune, often collectively known as the "New Orleans Sketches". To financially support himself, Faulkner was a prolific short story writer. His works commonly appeared in literary magazines like Scribner's and many were published posthumously. In addition to several speeches, Faulkner also wrote several essays on topics ranging from Albert Camus to Japan.

A year later in 1926, Faulkner's first novel Soldiers' Pay was published. His 19th and final, The Reivers, in 1962, the year he died.

Fiction

As I Lay Dying (1930) cover
Light in August (1932) cover
Absalom, Absalom! (1936) cover

Novels

Novels by William Faulkner
Year Title Publisher Notes Ref.
1926 Soldiers' Pay Boni & Liveright Faulkner's debut novel. [3]
1927 Mosquitoes Boni & Liveright [3]
1929 SartorisDenotes novels that are different versions of the same manuscript Harcourt, Brace An abridged version of Flags in the Dust. The original manuscript was published posthumously by Random House on August 22, 1973. [4]
1929 The Sound and the Fury Jonathan Cape & Harrison Smith An appendix to the novel, "Compson 1699–1945", was included in The Portable Faulkner, edited by Malcolm Cowley and published by Viking Press in 1946. First appearance of the Compson family. [3]
1930 As I Lay Dying Jonathan Cape & Harrison Smith [3]
1931 Sanctuary Jonathan Cape & Harrison Smith An introduction to the novel by Faulkner was first included in the Modern Library edition of the novel published on March 25, 1932. [5]
1932 Light in August Harrison Smith & Robert Haas [6]
1935 Pylon Harrison Smith & Robert Haas First novel since Mosquitoes not to be set in Yoknapatawpha County. [3]
1936 Absalom, Absalom! Random House A foreword to the novel by author John Jeremiah Sullivan has been included in the Modern Library edition of the novel published in April 2012. Second novel featuring Quentin Compson, after The Sound and the Fury. [7]
1938 The Unvanquished Random House A collection of seven interrelated short stories, six of which are revisions of stories previously published in The Saturday Evening Post. "An Odor of Verbena" is new to The Unvanquished. [8]
1939 The Wild Palms Random House Not set in Yoknapatawpha County. Consists of two interwoven stories: "The Wild Palms" and "Old Man". Included as If I Forget Thee, Jerusalem, Faulkner's original title, in the Library of America collection Novels 1936-1940, published in 1990. Sometimes published as The Wild Palms [If I Forget Thee, Jerusalem]. [8]
1940 The Hamlet Random House The first book in Faulkner's Snopes trilogy. [8]
1942 Go Down, Moses Random House Contains seven interrelated short stories, five of which had been published previously. "Was" and "The Fire and the Hearth" are exclusive to the novel. First published as Go Down, Moses and Other Stories; the title was altered for subsequent editions at Faulkner's insistence. [9]
1948 Intruder in the Dust Random House [10]
1951 Requiem for a Nun Random House Sequel to Sanctuary. Written as a play with prose parts preceding each act. [11]
1954 A Fable Random House Not set in Yoknapatawpha County. Winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and the National Book Award in 1955. [12]
1957 The Town Random House The second book in Faulkner's Snopes trilogy. [13]
1959 The Mansion Random House The third book in Faulkner's Snopes trilogy. [14]
1962 The Reivers Random House Winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1963. [14]
1973 Flags in the DustDenotes novels that are different versions of the same manuscript Random House Original manuscript of what became Sartoris, prior to extensive editing [15]
Key
Denotes novels that are different versions of the same manuscript Denotes novels that are different versions of the same manuscript

Notable novel compilations

  • The Portable Faulkner (1946), edited by Malcolm Cowley

To date, Library of America has published all of Faulkner's novels in five volumes, containing restored authoritative texts.

  • Novels 1926–1929, containing Soldiers' Pay, Mosquitoes, Flags in the Dust, The Sound and the Fury (ISBN 978-1-93108289-1, 1170 pp, April 6, 2006)
  • Novels 1930–1935, containing As I Lay Dying, Sanctuary, Light in August, Pylon (ISBN 978-0-94045026-4, 1056 pp, December 1, 1985)
  • Novels 1936–1940, containing Absalom, Absalom!, The Unvanquished, If I Forget Thee, Jerusalem, The Hamlet (ISBN 978-0-94045055-4, 1148 pp, June 1, 1990)
  • Novels 1942–1954, containing Go Down, Moses, Intruder in the Dust, Requiem for a Nun, A Fable (ISBN 978-0-94045085-1, 1110 pp, October 1, 1994)
  • Novels 1957–1962, containing The Town, The Mansion, The Reivers (ISBN 978-1-88301169-7, 1020 pp, October 1, 1999)

Short stories

Faulker as a cadet in the Royal Canadian Air Force, 1918
During his time in New Orleans, Faulkner lived in a house in the French Quarter (pictured center yellow), where he wrote the "New Orleans Sketches".
The Square of Oxford, Mississippi appeared in many of Faulkner's stories.
Faulkner in 1954
Faulkner's home, Rowan Oak
Short stories by William Faulkner
Year Title First published in Notes Ref.
1919 "Landing in Luck" Mississippian [16]
1922 "The Hill" Mississippian [17]
1925 "New Orleans" The Times-Picayune The collective "New Orleans Sketches" refers to the stories Faulkner published in The Times-Picayune in 1925. [18]
1925 "Chartres Street" The Times-Picayune [19]
1925 "Damon and Pythias Unlimited" The Times-Picayune [19]
1925 "Jealousy" The Times-Picayune [16]
1925 "Cheest" The Times-Picayune [19]
1925 "Out of Nazareth" The Times-Picayune [20]
1925 "The Kingdom of God" The Times-Picayune [16]
1925 "The Rosary" The Times-Picayune [21]
1925 "The Cobbler" The Times-Picayune [19]
1925 "Chance" The Times-Picayune [19]
1925 "Sunset" The Times-Picayune [21]
1925 "The Kid Learns" The Times-Picayune [16]
1925 "Home" The Times-Picayune [16]
1925 "Episode" The Times-Picayune [16]
1925 "Liar" The Times-Picayune [16]
1925 "Country Mice" The Times-Picayune [19]
1925 "Yo Ho and Two Bottles of Rum" The Times-Picayune [22]
1930 "A Rose for Emily" Forum [23]
1930 "Honor" American Mercury [16]
1930 "Thrift" Saturday Evening Post [23]
1930 "Red Leaves" Saturday Evening Post [24]
1931 "Ad Astra" American Caravan [25]
1931 "Dry September" Scribner's Magazine [26]
1931 "That Evening Sun" American Mercury [27]
1931 "Hair" American Mercury [16]
1931 "Spotted Horses" Scribner's Magazine [21]
1931 "The Hound" Scribner's Magazine [28]
1931 "Fox Hunt" Harper's [16]
1931 "Carcassonne"
1931 "Divorce in Naples"
1931 "Victory"
1931 "All the Dead Pilots"
1931 "Crevasse"
1931 "Mistral"
1931 "A Justice"
1931 "Dr. Martino" [29]
1931 "Idyll in the Desert" Random House [16]
1932 "Miss Zilphia Gant" Book Club of Texas [20]
1932 "Death Drag" Scribner's Magazine [30]
1932 "Centaur in Brass" American Mercury [19]
1932 "Once Aboard the Lugger (I)" Contempo [20]
1932 "Lizards in Jamshyd's Courtyard" Saturday Evening Post [31]
1932 "Turn About" Saturday Evening Post [22]
1932 "Smoke" Harper's [21]
1932 "Mountain Victory" Saturday Evening Post [32]
1933 "There Was a Queen" Scribner's [21]
1933 "Artist at Home" Story [19]
1933 "Beyond" Post [33]
1934 "Elly" Story [16]
1934 "Pennsylvania Station" American Mercury [20]
1934 "Wash" Harper's Magazine [34]
1934 "A Bear Hunt" Saturday Evening Post [16]
1934 "The Leg"
1934 "Black Music"
1934 "Mule in the Yard" Scribner's [35]
1934 "Ambuscade" Saturday Evening Post [36]
1934 "Lo!" Story [20]
1934 "Raid" Saturday Evening Post [21]
1935 "Golden Land" American Mercury [16]
1935 "That Will Be Fine" American Mercury [21]
1935 "Uncle Willy" American Mercury [22]
1935 "Skirmish at Sartoris" Scribner's [21]
1935 "Lion" Harper's [16]
1936 "The Brooch" Scribner's [19]
1936 "Two Dollar Wife" [37]
1936 "Fool About a Horse" Scribner's [16]
1936 "Vendee" Saturday Evening Post [22]
1937 "Monk" Scribner's [20]
1939 "Barn Burning" Scribner's [19]
1939 "Hand Upon the Waters" Saturday Evening Post [16]
1940 "A Point of Law" Collier's [20]
1940 "The Old People" Harper's Later published in Go Down, Moses (1942) [20]
1940 "Pantaloon in Black" Harper's Later published in Go Down, Moses (1942)) [16]
1940 "Gold Is Not Always" Atlantic Monthly [16]
1940 "Tomorrow" Saturday Evening Post [22]
1941 "Go Down, Moses" Collier's Later published in Go Down, Moses (1942) [16]
1941 "The Tall Men" Saturday Evening Post [21]
1942 "Two Soldiers" Saturday Evening Post [22]
1942 "Delta Autumn" Story Later published in Go Down, Moses (1942) [19]
1942 "The Bear" Later published in Go Down, Moses (1942)
1943 "Afternoon of a Cow" Fontaine Published in French [25]
1943 "Shingles for the Lord" Saturday Evening Post [21]
1943 "My Grandmother Millard and General Bedford
Forrest and the Battle of Harrykin Creek"
Story [38]
1943 "Shall Not Perish" Story [21]
1946 "An Error in Chemistry" Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine [16]
1948 "A Courtship" Sewanee Review [19]
1949 "Knight's Gambit"
1950 "A Name for the City" Harper's [20]
1951 "Notes on a Horsethief" Levee Press [20]
1954 "Mississippi" Holiday [20]
1954 "Sepulture South: Gaslight" Harper's Bazaar [21]
1955 "Race at Morning" Saturday Evening Post [21]
1955 "By the People" Mademoiselle [39]
1962 "Hell Creek Crossing" Saturday Evening Post [16]
1965 "Mr. Acarius" Saturday Evening Post [20]
1967 "The Wishing Tree" Random House Faulkner's Only Children's Book, written in 1927 [40]
1971 "Al Jackson" William Faulkner und die humoristiche Tradition des amerikanischen Südens [25]
1973 "And Now What's To Do" Mississippi Quarterly [19]
1973 "Nympholepsy" Mississippi Quarterly [20]
1976 "Music – Sweeter than the Angels Sing" Southern Review [20]
1976 "The Priest" Mississippi Quarterly [21]
1976 "Mayday" University of Notre Dame Press [20]
1978 "Frankie and Johnny" Mississippi Quarterly [16]
1979 "Don Giovanni" Mississippi Quarterly [16]
1979 "Peter"
1979 "A Portrait of Elmer" The Georgia Review [21]
1979 "Adolescence" Uncollected Stories [19]
1979 "Snow"
1979 "Moonlight"
1979 "With Caution and Dispatch" Esquire [22]
1979 "Hog Pawn"
1979 "A Dangerous Man"
1979 "A Return"
1979 "The Big Shot"
1979 "Once Aboard the Lugger (II)"
1979 "Dull Tale"
1979 "Evangeline" The Atlantic [16]
1988 "Love"
1995 "Christmas Tree"
1995 "Rose of Lebanon"
1999 "Lucas Beauchamp"

Plays

Plays by William Faulkner
Year Title Notes Ref.
1921 Marionettes One-act play, first produced at the University of Mississippi

Produced

Faulkner was an uncredited screenplay writer for Gunga Din (1939).
Faulkner co-wrote the 1946 adaptation (pictured) of Ernest Hemingway's novel To Have and Have Not. It remains the only film with contributions from two Nobel Prize Laureates.
Faulkner co-wrote the Howard Hawks-directed The Big Sleep (1946).
Lucas Beauchamp (portrayed by Juano Hernandez) in the 1949 Intruder in the Dust film adaptation
Produced screenplays by William Faulkner
Year Film Credit type Based on Ref.
1932 Flesh Uncredited
1933 Today We Live Dialogue and story "Turn About" by William Faulkner [41]
1936 The Road to Glory Screenplay
1935 Banjo on My Knee Uncredited Banjo on my Knee by Harry Hamilton [42][43]
1937 Slave Ship Story The Last Slaver by George S. King [44]
1938 Submarine Patrol Uncredited, screenplay Ray Milholland's The Splinter Fleet of Otranto Barrage, 20th Century-Fox [45]
1939 Gunga Din Uncredited "Gunga Din" by Rudyard Kipling
1939 Drums Along the Mohawk Contributor, Uncredited (Drums Along the Mohawk by Walter D. Edmonds) [46]
1944 To Have and Have Not Screenplay To Have and Have Not by Ernest Hemingway [46]
1945 The Southerner Uncredited Hold Autumn in Your Hand by George Sessions Perry
1945 Mildred Pierce Contract Writer, Uncredited Mildred Pierce by James M. Cain [47][48]
1946 The Big Sleep Screenplay The Big Sleep by Raymond Chandler [49][50]
1947 Stallion Road Uncredited, screenplay Stephen Longstreet's eponymous novel, for Warner Bros. [51]
1949 Intruder in the Dust Uncredited Intruder in the Dust by Faulkner, suggestions and revisions may have been wholly rejected [52]
1953 Shall not Perish Television screenplay To Have and Have Not by Ernest Hemingway, broadcast by CBS on Lux Video Theatre [52]
1955 Land of the Pharaohs Screenplay [53]

Unproduced

Unproduced screenplays by William Faulkner
Year Title Type Notes Ref.
1932 Night Bird Story outline for unwritten screenplay Included in Faulkner's MGM Screenplays, published in October 1982 by University of Tennessee Press.
1932 Manservant Treatment for unwritten screenplay Based on Faulkner's short story "Love". Included in Faulkner's MGM Screenplays.
1932 The College Widow Treatment for unwritten screenplay For MGM [54]
1932 Absolution Treatment for unwritten screenplay For MGM, based on Faulkner's "All the Dead Pilots" [54]
1932 Flying the Mail Screenplay Adapted from treatment by Ralph Graves and Bernard Fineman for MGM [54]
1933 War Birds Screenplay For MGM, based on John McGavock Grider's War Birds as well as Faulkner's "All the Dead Pilots", "Ad Astra", and Sartoris [55]
1933 "Mythical Latin-American Kingdom Story" Screenplay Written for MGM [55]
1933 Louisiana Lou Screenplay Used for the 1934 film Lazy River without Faulkner's involvement.
1936 Wooden Crosses Screenplay For 20th Century-Fox [56]
1936 Zero Hour Screenplay For 20th Century-Fox [56]
1942 The De Gaulle Story Screenplay [57]
1943 Country Lawyer Story treatment Included in Country Lawyer and Other Stories for the Screen, published in June 1987 by University Press of Mississippi.
1943 Battle Cry Screenplay Appears in Faulkner: A Comprehensive Guide to the Brodsky Collection, Volume IV: Battle Cry, published in December 1985 by University Press of Mississippi.
1943 Revolt in the Earth Screenplay Written with Dudley Murphy for Warner Bros., loose adaptation of Faulkner's "Wash" and Absalom! Absalom! [46]
Early 1940s Untitled Screenplay Involves a love triangle and murder at a carnival in Belgrade, Serbia, written with Dudley Murphy for Warner Bros., loose adaptation of Faulkner's "Wash" and Absalom! Absalom! [58]
1946 One Way to Catch a Horse Treatment [51]
1946 Continuous Performance Treatment Collaborated with unknown person [51]
c.1948 Morningstar Treatment Concerns an interplanetary trip to Venus, discussed project with Howard Hawks [59]
1953 Old Man Television screenplay Adaptation of the "Old Man" chapter in Wild Palms [60]
1956 Untitled Television screenplay Concerns a conflicted man forced to testify before the House Un-American Activities Committee [61]
Untitled Screenplay notes Largely illegible, concerns a woman who buys a love potion [61]

Poetry collections

Poetry collections by William Faulkner
Year Title Publisher Notes Ref.
1921 Vision in Spring University of Mississippi Published with the 1920-1921 Ole Miss yearbook [62]
1924 The Marble Faun Four Seas His first book published [63]
1933 A Green Bough Harrison Smith and Robert Haas [64]
1962 Early Prose and Poetry Little, Brown and Company Compiled and edited by Carvel Collins, most had previously appeared in the Ole Miss student newspaper [64][65]
1981 Helen, a Courtship and Mississippi Poems Tulane University Press & Yoknapatawpha Press Joint publication [66]

Essays

Faulkner's final essay was on Albert Camus, who adapted Faulkner's 1951 novel Requiem for a Nun for the stage.[67]
Essays by William Faulkner
Year Title Notes Ref.
1953 "A Note On Sherwood Anderson" [68]
1954 "Mississippi" [69]
1954 "A Guest's Impression of New England" [69]
1955 "An Innocent at Rinkside" [69]
1955 "Kentucky: May: Saturday" [69]
1955 "On Privacy" With "On Fear", was part of larger unrealized essay collection "The American Dream" [70]
1955 "Impressions of Japan" [69]
1955 "To the Youth of Japan" [69]
1956 "Letter to a Northern Editor" [69]
1956 "On Fear: Deep South in Labor: Mississippi" See "On Privacy" [70]
1956 "A Letter to the Leaders in the Negro Race" [69]
1961 "Albert Camus" [69]

Book reviews

Faulkner wrote a review of Ernest Hemingway's (pictured right) The Old Man and the Sea (1952).
Book reviews by William Faulkner
Year Book reviewed Author Ref.
1931 The Road Back Erich Maria Remarque [71]
1935 Test Pilot Jimmy Collins [71]
1952 The Old Man and the Sea Ernest Hemingway [71]

Introductions

Introductions by William Faulkner
Year Title Ref.
1926 Foreword to Sherwood Anderson & Other Famous Creoles [71]
1932 Introduction to the Modern Library Edition of Sanctuary [71]
1954 Foreword to The Faulkner Reader [71]

Public letters

Faulkner wrote a public letter condemning the lynching of Emmett Till. Emmett's mother is pictured above his mutilated corpse.[72]
Public letters by William Faulkner
Year Title Notes Ref.
1927 To the Book Editor of the Chicago Tribune [71]
1938 To the President of the League of American Writers [71]
1941 To the Editor of the Memphis Commercial Appeal [71]
1946 "His Name Was Pete" In the Oxford Eagle [71]
1947 To the Editor of the Oxford Eagle [71]
1950 To the Editor of the Memphis Commercial Appeal March 26 [73]
1950 To the Editor of the Memphis Commercial Appeal April 9 [73]
1950 To the Secretary of the American Academy of Arts and Letters [73]
1950 To the Voters of Oxford [73]
1950 To the Editor of the Oxford Eagle [73]
1950 To the Editor of the Time [73]
1951 Statement to the Press on the Willie McGee Case Published in the Memphis Commercial Appeal [73]
1954 To the Editor of The New York Times [73]
1955 To the Editor of the Memphis Commercial Appeal February 20 [73]
1955 To the Editor of the Memphis Commercial Appeal March 20 [73]
1955 To the Editor of The New York Times [73]
1955 To the Editor of the Memphis Commercial Appeal April 3 [73]
1955 To the Editor of the Memphis Commercial Appeal April 10 [73]
1955 To the Editor of the Memphis Commercial Appeal April 17 [73]
1955 Press Dispatch on the Emmet Till Case Provided to United Press International [73][74]
1956 To the Editor of Life [73]
1956 To the Editor of the Reporter [73]
1956 To the Editor of Time April 23 [75]
1956 To the Editor of Time December 10 [75]
1956 To the Editor of The New York Times [75]
1957 To the Editor of Time [75]
1957 To the Editor of the Memphis Commercial Appeal [75]
1957 Notice September 24, published in the Oxford Eagle [75]
1957 Notice October 15, published in the Oxford Eagle [75]
1960 To the Editor of The New York Times [75]

Speeches

"I decline to accept the end of man... I believe that man will not merely endure: he will prevail." — Faulkner in his 1950 Nobel Prize acceptance speech
Speeches by William Faulkner
Year Title Notes Ref.
1940 Funeral Sermon for Mammy Caroline Barr [76]
1950 Upon Receiving the Nobel Prize for Literature Although he won the Nobel Prize in 1949, Faulkner accepted the award alongside 1950 Laureate Bertrand Russell in a combined ceremony. [76][77]
1951 To the Graduating Class, University High School [76]
1951 Upon Being Made an Officer of the Legion of Honor [76]
1952 To the Delta Council [76]
1953 To the Graduating Class, Pine Manor Junior College [76]
1955 Upon Receiving the National Book Award for Fiction [76]
1955 To the Southern Historical Association [76]
1957 Upon Receiving the Silver Medal of the Athens Academy [76]
1957 To the American Academy of Arts and Letters in Presenting the Gold Medal for Fiction to John Dos Passos [76]
1958 To the Raven, Jefferson, and ODK Societies of the University of Virginia [76]
1958 To the English Club of the University of Virginia [76]
1959 To the U.S. National Commission for UNESCO [76]
1962 To the American Academy of Arts and Letters upon Receiving the Gold Medal for Fiction [76]

Notes and references

Citations

  1. "William Faulkner Is Dead in Mississippi Home Town; Faulkner is Dead in Oxford at 64". The New York Times. July 7, 1962. Archived from the original on January 1, 2023. Retrieved December 31, 2022.
  2. Fargnoli, Golay & Hamblin 2008, p. 461.
  3. Fargnoli, Golay & Hamblin 2008, p. 483.
  4. Meriwether (1977), p. 419.
  5. Fargnoli, Golay & Hamblin 2008, p. 468.
  6. Blotner (1974), p. 1 of Notes, Vol. 1.
  7. Fargnoli, Golay & Hamblin 2008, p. 470.
  8. Fargnoli, Golay & Hamblin 2008, p. 471.
  9. Fargnoli, Golay & Hamblin 2008, p. 472.
  10. Meriwether (1977), p. 423.
  11. Fargnoli, Golay & Hamblin 2008, p. 474.
  12. Fargnoli, Golay & Hamblin 2008, p. 475.
  13. Meriwether (1977), pp. 425–426.
  14. Fargnoli, Golay & Hamblin 2008, p. 478.
  15. Meriwether (1977), pp. 427.
  16. Skei (1985), p. 140.
  17. Skei (1985), pp. 18, 140.
  18. Skei (1985), p. 21.
  19. Skei (1985), p. 139.
  20. Skei (1985), p. 141.
  21. Skei (1985), p. 142.
  22. Skei (1985), p. 143.
  23. Skei (1985), pp. 68, 142.
  24. Skei (1985), p. 64.
  25. Skei (1985), p. 138.
  26. Blotner (1974), p. 654.
  27. Skei (1985), p. 65.
  28. Skei (1985), p. 68.
  29. Skei (1985), p. 69.
  30. Skei (1985), p. 68.
  31. Skei (1985), p. 72.
  32. Skei (1985), p. 65.
  33. Skei (1985), p. 62.
  34. Skei (1985), p. 81.
  35. Skei (1985), p. 82.
  36. Skei (1985), p. 84.
  37. Skei (1985), p. 28.
  38. Skei (1985), pp. 101, 141.
  39. Skei (1985), pp. 107, 139.
  40. Meriwether (1977), pp. 426–427.
  41. Hayhoe (1978), pp. 410-411.
  42. Blotner (1974), pp. 927–933.
  43. Sherman, Beatrice (February 23, 1936). "Shanty-Boat People; Banjo on My Knee. By Harry Hamilton. 320 pp. Indianapolis: The Bobbs-Merrill Co. $2". The New York Times. Archived from the original on January 1, 2023. Retrieved December 31, 2022.
  44. Hayhoe (1978), pp. 413-414.
  45. Hayhoe (1978), pp. 414-415.
  46. Hayhoe (1978), p. 415.
  47. Blotner (1974), pp. 1172–1175.
  48. Welsh (1983), p. 66.
  49. Blotner (1974), pp. 1171, 1175-1176.
  50. Dougherty (2009), p. 64.
  51. Hayhoe (1978), p. 416.
  52. Hayhoe (1978), p. 417.
  53. Blotner (1974), pp. 1537–1538.
  54. Hayhoe (1978), p. 410.
  55. Hayhoe (1978), p. 411.
  56. Hayhoe (1978), p. 412.
  57. Hamblin (2001), pp. 79-86.
  58. Hayhoe (1978), pp. 418-419.
  59. Hayhoe (1978), pp. 416-417.
  60. Hayhoe (1978), pp. 417-418.
  61. Hayhoe (1978), p. 419.
  62. Blotner (1974), p. 312.
  63. Minter (1980), pp. 44, 257.
  64. Tuck (1964), p. 247.
  65. Volpe (1964), p. 414.
  66. Ragan (1982), p. 337.
  67. Dugdale, John (March 19, 2009). "France's strange love affair with William Faulkner". The Guardian. Archived from the original on June 4, 2022. Retrieved June 4, 2022.
  68. Faulkner, William (June 1953). "Sherwood Anderson". Vanity Fair. Archived from the original on December 25, 2022. Retrieved December 25, 2022.
  69. Faulkner (1965), p. xi.
  70. Faulkner (1965), p. vii.
  71. Faulkner (1965), p. xiii.
  72. Blotner (1974), pp. 1570-1571.
  73. Faulkner (1965), p. xiv.
  74. Blotner (1974), p. 1570.
  75. Faulkner (1965), p. xv.
  76. Faulkner (1965), p. xii.
  77. Blotner (1974), pp. 1358–1364.

Works cited

  • Fargnoli, A. Nicholas; Golay, Michael; Hamblin, Robert W. (2008). Critical Companion to William Faulkner: A Literary Reference to His Life And Work. Critical Companion. Facts on File. ISBN 9780816064328. Archived from the original on 2023-01-10. Retrieved 2016-11-04.
  • Kirk, Robert W.; Klotz, Marvin (1965). Faulkner's People: A complete guide and index to the characters and fiction of William Faulkner. Los Angeles: University of California Press.
  • Hamblin, Robert W. (2001). "The Curious Case of Faulkner's "The De Gaulle Story"". The Faulkner Journal. The Johns Hopkins University Press. 16 (1): 79–86. JSTOR 24908321. Archived from the original on 2023-01-01. Retrieved 2023-01-01.
  • Blotner, Joseph (1974). Faulkner: A Biography. Vol. 2. Random House.
  • Welsh, J.M. (1983). "Review: "Mildred Pierce" Reshaped". Literature/Film Quarterly. Salibury University. 11 (1): 66–68. JSTOR 43797295. Archived from the original on 2023-01-01. Retrieved 2023-01-01.
  • Minter, David L. (1980). William Faulkner, his life and work. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press.
  • Tuck, Dorothy (1964). Crowell's Handbook of Faulkner. Crowell.
  • Skei, Hans H. (1985). William Faulkner, the Short Story Career : An Outline of Faulkner's Short Story Writing from 1919 to 1962. Universitetsforlaget (distributed by Columbia University Press).
  • Volpe, Edmond Loris (1964). A reader's guide to William Faulkner. Straus.
  • Faulkner, William (1965). Essays Speeches & Public Letters. ISBN 9780394423616.
  • Dougherty, David C. (2009). "Mr. Elkin and the Movies". New England Review. Middlebury College Publications. 30 (2): 64–73.
  • Ragan, David Paul (1982). "Review of Helen: A Courtship and Mississippi Poems". The Mississippi Quarterly. The Johns Hopkins University Press. 35 (3): 337–342.
  • Hayhoe, George F. (1978). "Faulkner In Hollywood: A Checklist of His Film Scripts at the University of Virginia". The Mississippi Quarterly. The Johns Hopkins University Press. 31 (3): 407–419. JSTOR 26474384. Archived from the original on 2023-01-04. Retrieved 2023-01-04.
  • Meriwether, James B. (1977). "The Books Of William Faulkner: A Guide For Students And Scholars". The Mississippi Quarterly. The Johns Hopkins University Press. 30 (3): 417–428.
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