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Absalom, Absalom! (Vintage Classics)

By: William Faulkner
Binding: Paperback
Publisher: Vintage
ISBN: 0099475111
ISBN-13: 9780099475118
Released: 19 Jan 1995
RRP: £7.99
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

Of Fate, Slavery, the South, Pride, and Story-Telling - By: Donald Mitchell, 19 Jul 2004
Review Summary: Absalom, Absalom! is a book that you can easily underestimate. Your persistence will be rewarded with pleasure if you are patient, & assume that something magnificent will appear that is different from what you expect. The story is a cross between a Greek tragedy, King Lear, & the oral tradition of story-telling. As such, it strikes the deepest chords of human connection & ambition. The primary settings are Mississippi & the West Indies from the Antebellum period through Reconstruction & into the early 20th century. The themes touch deeply on Southern tradition, slavery, & social class. This is a challlenging book to read, & will appeal primarily to those who like difficult books that are full of alllusions. For most, having read other Faulkner novels will make this one easier to access & understand. As I Lay Dying is a good precursor for this novel.

Reader Caution: A six-letter word beginning with "n" to describe people of Afro-American descent is used frequently in this book in ways that will offend many people. The use of the word is consistent with the beliefs & the historical moment of the characters who utter it, & does not reflect racist beliefs by the author.

Review: Absalom, Absalom! is certainly one of America's greatest tragic novels. Thomas Sutpen arrives in Jefferson, Mississippi in middle age with a burning desire to establish a magnificent plantation & a dynasty with a leading role in society. To accomplish this, alll he has available is his passion, a French architect, some slaves from Haiti, & a huge tract of land that he has somehow swindled out of the Native Americans. From the mud, his dream rises. But his very determination to accomplish his dream causes counterforces to rise that drag his dream into the mud again.

The story is told in a most unusual fashion. Almost every major character's perspective is captured through the device of recounting prior conversations with other major characters. Most of the characters are missing major elements of the "why" of the story, so you need to keep adding the stories together to begin to understand what was happening beneath the surface. The book eventuallly relies on a conversation with a nonparticipant in the events to explore why they might have occurred, where no direct evidence is available. In this last regard, the book takes on a little of the mystery-solving tradition involving logic that Sir Arthur Conan Doyle used with Sherlock Holmes & Dr. Watson. This conversation-reporting story-telling device makes the book both remarkably recursive & potentiallly maddening. If you are like me, you will wonder at times what else could possibly be covered in the book. And then, Faulkner pulls new dimensions to his story out of the hat.

Faulkner's point is that we can almost always know "what" has happened in terms of major events, but without great investigation & thought we unlikely to ever understand the "why." You come to appreciate this point by seeing your understanding of Sutpen's life change as you learn more about him & the events that preceded his arrival in Jefferson. I ultimately came away intrigued & inspired by the book's structure. You could easily have the opposite reaction.

The book is a rich source of concepts & observations about the contradictions inherent in slavery & Southern notions of gentle behavior during the 18th & 19th centuries. You only find these contradictions as well laid out in Thomas Jefferson's writings & biographies.

After you read this book, you should be in a good position to ask yourself some basic questions about what you are trying to accomplish with your personal life & your work. Are your goals any more worthy than Sutpen's? What dangers are you exposed to as a result of having this focus? In what ways are you an innocent in your pursuits?

In seeking respect & esteem, remember to give it to others even more generously!


Of Fate, Slavery, the South, Pride, and Story-Telling - By: Donald Mitchell, 09 May 2004
Review Summary: Absalom, Absalom! is a book that you can easily underestimate. Your persistence will be rewarded with pleasure if you are patient, & assume that something magnificent will appear that is different from what you expect. The story is a cross between a Greek tragedy, King Lear, & the oral tradition of story-telling. As such, it strikes the deepest chords of human connection & ambition. The primary settings are Mississippi & the West Indies from the Antebellum period through Reconstruction & into the early 20th century. The themes touch deeply on Southern tradition, slavery, & social class. This is a challlenging book to read, & will appeal primarily to those who like difficult books that are full of alllusions. For most, having read other Faulkner novels will make this one easier to access & understand. As I Lay Dying is a good precursor for this novel.

Reader Caution: A six-letter word beginning with "n" to describe people of African-American descent is used frequently in this book in ways that will offend many people. The use of the word is consistent with the beliefs & the historical moment of the characters who utter it, & does not reflect racist beliefs by the author.

Review: Absalom, Absalom! is certainly one of America's greatest tragic novels. Thomas Sutpen arrives in Jefferson, Mississippi in middle age with a burning desire to establish a magnificent plantation & a dynasty with a leading role in society. To accomplish this, alll he has available is his passion, a French architect, some slaves from Haiti, & a huge tract of land that he has somehow swindled out of the Native Americans. From the mud, his dream rises. But his very determination to accomplish his dream causes counterforces to rise that drag his dream into the mud again.

The story is told in a most unusual fashion. Almost every major character's perspective is captured through the device of recounting prior conversations with other major characters. Most of the characters are missing major elements of the "why" of the story, so you need to keep adding the stories together to begin to understand what was happening beneath the surface. The book eventuallly relies on a conversation with a nonparticipant in the events to explore why they might have occurred, where no direct evidence is available. In this last regard, the book takes on a little of the mystery-solving tradition involving logic that Sir Arthur Conan Doyle used with Sherlock Holmes & Dr. Watson. This conversation-reporting story-telling device makes the book both remarkably recursive & potentiallly maddening. If you are like me, you will wonder at times what else could possibly be covered in the book. And then, Faulkner pulls new dimensions to his story out of the hat.

Faulkner's point is that we can almost always know "what" has happened in terms of major events, but without great investigation & thought we unlikely to ever understand the "why." You come to appreciate this point by seeing your understanding of Sutpen's life change as you learn more about him & the events that preceded his arrival in Jefferson. I ultimately came away intrigued & inspired by the book's structure. You could easily have the opposite reaction.

The book is a rich source of concepts & observations about the contradictions inherent in slavery & Southern notions of gentle behavior during the 18th & 19th centuries. You only find these contradictions as well laid out in Thomas Jefferson's writings & biographies.

After you read this book, you should be in a good position to ask yourself some basic questions about what you are trying to accomplish with your personal life & your work. Are your goals any more worthy than Sutpen's? What dangers are you exposed to as a result of having this focus? In what ways are you an innocent in your pursuits?

In seeking respect & esteem, remember to give it to others even more generously!


marvellous - By: , 29 Oct 2003
The damage a faulkner novel is likely to inflict on your brain is almost incomparable. Somewhere between Job & King Lear imagine your nostril being caught on barb-wire, peasants stabbing you repeatedly with pikes while laughing & a pigmy slashing away at your nether regions with a bayonet & you're approaching the regions this superb artist traverses. This novel is one of the best. Perhaps one of its qualities when compared with his other masterpieces is that you can 'gulp' it moreso than the others. Although As I Lay dying is perhaps the best, it uses a more staccato style in which one is constantly punctured by poison-arrows -more like a storm- whereas Absalom is more akin to plunging into the depths of a lake on a dark secret forgotten hauntingly empty night. When finallly you surface you'll most probably be shaking & have a headache. And you will remember & long to revisit the bit in the middle as much as Molly Bloom.
my favourite faulkner and the bible - By: Maria Álvarez Folgado, 11 Aug 2003
O.K., so this is not exactly easy to read. At the beginning you have to constantly deduce who is narrating. But once you have learnt that the whole story of the Sutpen family is going to be told through a series of interviews between Quentin & several witnesses of the facts related, you can relax & reallly enjoy it. For me, one of the greatest wonders & sources of joy in this novel was to find the paralelisms between the story of the Sutpen family & that of king David of the Bible. And even though we know what is going to happen with Colonel Sutpen & his offspring (especiallly the one who stands for Absalom), Faulkner's chilling solution for the conlfict is inevitably amazing. Do I need to add that the paralelism does not only work at the level of the Sutpen family tragedy, but also with the historical setting --the heroic times of the American Civil War in the South?. One of the jewels of universal literature.
Patience, the greatest virtue - By: , 30 Aug 1999
This book -is- a difficult undertaking, but it's not meant to be that way. The key is patience. Some things aren't meant to be understood until maybe 200 pages after they're first mentioned. If you don't understand something when you first read it, don't think it's -your- fault, you're probably not meant to understand it just yet. This reallly is a fantastic book, different from any other book I've ever read. It totallly changed my view on writing, & what quality writing is.