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William Cuthbert Faulkner's forebears first
came into Northeast Mississippi about the same time--circa
1840--the town of Oxford and, a few years later, the University
of Mississippi were founded. The Falkner family history is
typical of the struggle of the American pioneer: fraught with
sickness, violence, despair, fortune, and war. This history
presented a variety of colorful incidents and people who would
appear in somewhat altered forms as events and characters
in William Faulkner's literature, as was the case with the
"Old Colonel," William Clark Falkner, William Faulkner's great-grandfather,
dead for eight years at the time William Cuthbert Faulkner
was born, September 25, 1897.
Faulkner's birth truly marked the end of an era and the beginning
of another. Between 1897, when Faulkner was born in New Albany,
and 1903, when Faulkner moved to Oxford just three days shy
of his fifth birthday, Oxford's first telephones were installed.
The first water tower also went up at that time, providing
Oxford residents sewage and plumbing. Oxford turned on to
electricity in 1908.
As Faulkner grew up in Oxford, "a shy and troubled boy
who would become a shy and troubled man, " according to biographer
David Minter--working in his father's livery stable, dropping
out of high school, meeting his sweetheart, Estelle Oldham,
who he would later wed, enrolling as a student at the University
of Mississippi--his views would be shaped dramatically and
continually by family and local life.
In spite of his disdain for formal schooling, literary people
had a very early influence upon him, and Oxford then had a
rough literati, much as it does today. These included Phil
Stone, the Yale-educated lawyer who encouraged Faulkner to
read Keats and Swinburne and who read Faulkner's own first
poems, saying later that "anyone could have seen he had real
talent, " and Ben Wasson, a University student who later would
become his first agent. Through his early acquaintances, Faulkner
gained access to the libraries of Lucius Quintus Cincinnatus
Lamar and Augustus Baldwin Longstreet, Oxford's first writer
(his Georgia Scenes was published in 1835), and Stark Young
who Stone once told Faulkner, "opened my mind." Young was
a drama critic for the New York Times, an early editor of
the New Republic, translator of the first English edition
of Chekhov's The Seagull, and author of the 1934 bestseller
So Red the Rose. Young introduced Faulkner to Elizabeth Prall,
who managed the Doubleday Bookstore in New York and, in 1921,
offered Faulkner a job there, giving him his first big ride
out of town.
Faulkner's writing aspirations were also no doubt influenced
by his great-grandfather William Clark Falkner, who wrote,
in serial form for the Ripley Advertiser, The White Rose of
Memphis, and Rapid Ramblings in Europe. The former, when published
as a book in 1881, went through thirty-five printings, selling
160,000 copies--sales figures of the sort Faulkner would never
see for his own work, at least in his lifetime.
Faulkner's
life was characterized by ambivalent desires for fame and
privacy. In his youth he cultivated a bohemian look, "put
on airs," according to some townspeople, and became known
as "Count No Count." His mother brought him up to be a proud
person, which he rightfully was, but he was also withdrawn.
Perhaps, as Faulkner scholar Dianne Roberts told me, he invited
ambivalence and ambiguity because "as a writer you get a lot
of energy from conflict--conflict is where writing comes from."
His writing career was defined in large part by the explosive
and prolific genius of his early years when he wrote his greatest
books--The Sound and the Fury, Absalom, Absalom!, As I Lay
Dying, and Sanctuary--and for which he received very little
critical attention and, through the depth of the Depression,
almost no monetary compensation.
Midway through his career in the early 1940's, all but one
of his books were out of print. Malcolm Cowley proposed in
1945 to Faulkner that they do The Portable Faulkner, saying
he wanted in the book "nothing that doesn't deal with Mississippi."
The Portable Faulkner launched Faulkner's career anew and
his reading audience and acclaim have grown ever since.
Later, as many critics and Faulkner himself admitted, his
career was marked by a diminishing of his genius but a more
finely developed craftsmanship, as demonstrated in Go Down
Moses, the Snopes trilogy, and The Reivers. This period was
also punctuated by growing acclaim--the Nobel Prize, the Pulitzer
Prize (twice), and the National Book Award (twice).
Faulkner died after an illness July 6, 1962, in Wright's Sanatorium
in Byhalia, Mississippi.

Richard Howorth,
Owner, Square Books
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