William Faulkner (1897-1962) was an American writer and winner of the 1949 Nobel Prize in Literature. While he is best known for his novels—which earned him a place among the greatest of American writers—he also wrote poetry, which often reflected the same concern for place or region as an essential dynamic in the psychological struggle to comprehend modern reality that he exhibited in his novels and short stories about the South. His two collections of verse, Visions of Spring (1921) and The Marble Faun and a Green Bough (1924), serve as a sort of apprenticeship for his fiction; both were written prior to his debut novel, A Soldier’s Pay (1926).
William Faulkner (1897-1962) was an American writer and winner of the 1949 Nobel Prize in Literature. While he is best known for his novels—which earned him a place among the greatest of American writers—he also wrote poetry, which often reflected the same concern for place or region as an essential dynamic in the psychological struggle to comprehend modern reality that he exhibited in his novels and short stories about the South. His two collections of verse, Visions of Spring (1921) and The Marble Faun and a Green Bough (1924), serve as a sort of apprenticeship for his fiction; both were written prior to his debut novel, A Soldier’s Pay (1926).
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