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>> No.17478753 [View]
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17478753

>>17472057
Faulkner.

>> No.17465962 [View]
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>>17465404
OP should set aside this garbage and go read faulkner

>> No.17462349 [View]
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17462349

>>17462306
Faulkner, exclusively

>> No.17449334 [View]
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17449334

>>17449088
Man's gotta feed himself somehow

>> No.12942411 [View]
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12942411

Was it genre fiction?

>> No.12377249 [View]
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12377249

>Let me repeat. I have not read all the work of this present generation of writing. I have not had time yet. So I must speak only of the ones I do know. I am thinking now of what I rate the best one, Salinger's Catcher in the Rye, perhaps because this one expresses so completely what I have tried to say. A youth, father to what will—must—someday be a man, more intelligent than some and more sensitive than most, who—he would not even have called it by instinct because he did not know he possessed it because God perhaps had put it there, loved man and wished to be a part of mankind, humanity, who tried to join the human race and failed. To me, his tragedy was not that he was, as he perhaps thought, not tough enough or brave enough or deserving enough to be accepted into humanity. His tragedy was that when he attempted to enter the human race, there was no human race there. There was nothing for him to do save buzz, frantic and inviolate, inside the glass wall of his tumbler, until he either gave up or was himself, by himself, by his own frantic buzzing, destroyed.

>> No.11812144 [View]
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11812144

>Let me repeat. I have not read all the work of this present generation of writing. I have not had time yet. So I must speak only of the ones I do know. I am thinking now of what I rate the best one, Salinger's Catcher in the Rye, perhaps because this one expresses so completely what I have tried to say. A youth, father to what will—must—someday be a man, more intelligent than some and more sensitive than most, who—he would not even have called it by instinct because he did not know he possessed it because God perhaps had put it there, loved man and wished to be a part of mankind, humanity, who tried to join the human race and failed. To me, his tragedy was not that he was, as he perhaps thought, not tough enough or brave enough or deserving enough to be accepted into humanity. His tragedy was that when he attempted to enter the human race, there was no human race there. There was nothing for him to do save buzz, frantic and inviolate, inside the glass wall of his tumbler, until he either gave up or was himself, by himself, by his own frantic buzzing, destroyed

>> No.11805813 [View]
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11805813

Brainlet here. Which one of Faulkner's novels are most similar themetically?

>> No.10256219 [View]
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10256219

And then I looked at brother and his mean-looking and the crescent sun-eyes, like all the universe depended on his every fibre of being, him just knowing and me knowing, and I asked him into the yes-no,
"Brother? If the ere were a man so kind as to fix me wid some oats, I'll be damned if it aint yerself."
and then he said, "(insert obscure bible reference which is also the title of the novel)"

:O

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