Licht im August
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Readers` Reviews
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
katherine podrasky
The best piece of literature ever written so I was told by an O so educated man. I went for the audio book to help me get through it. I do appreciate the art but as many I needed a little help with the rolling on of the story.
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
alla m
This is a beautiful but difficult, sometimes harsh story line, well written by a old master.
The story line is difficult to piece together as the language is very difficult to interpret.
Faulkner was from this area and had a beautiful way to express the story.
People may differ somewhat in its interpretation.
I read this for a local book club selection which we then discussed.
The story line is difficult to piece together as the language is very difficult to interpret.
Faulkner was from this area and had a beautiful way to express the story.
People may differ somewhat in its interpretation.
I read this for a local book club selection which we then discussed.
★ ★ ☆ ☆ ☆
penelly
If you're reading this for English class, have fun. I tried reading it for pleasure, and gave up after 50 pages or so. If you're an English teacher or literary nerd, maybe you'll like it, but for "normal" readers, you'll spend the first ??? pages wondering: "what's the point of this tedious tome?" I later learned that this "stream of consciousness" writing style was considered revolutionary by the literary folks when it first came out. That's wonderful, but to me it's just rambling text with no coherence, no plot, no point.
Light in August (Modern Library - 88.6) (1966-03-27) [Hardcover] :: Light in August: The Corrected Text :: Castle Roogna (Xanth #3) :: Bearing an Hourglass (Incarnations of Immortality Book 2) :: Light in August
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
molli b
Wow! This novel is quite morbid, and grim. Probably most analogous with some of Cormac McCarthy's more dark epics. You read on to see how low this family can sink into a depraved, stingy, and heartless abyss. Faulkner was certainly a genius.
★ ★ ☆ ☆ ☆
cecilia robles
If you're reading this for English class, have fun. I tried reading it for pleasure, and gave up after 50 pages or so. If you're an English teacher or literary nerd, maybe you'll like it, but for "normal" readers, you'll spend the first ??? pages wondering: "what's the point of this tedious tome?" I later learned that this "stream of consciousness" writing style was considered revolutionary by the literary folks when it first came out. That's wonderful, but to me it's just rambling text with no coherence, no plot, no point.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
madelinengo
Wow! This novel is quite morbid, and grim. Probably most analogous with some of Cormac McCarthy's more dark epics. You read on to see how low this family can sink into a depraved, stingy, and heartless abyss. Faulkner was certainly a genius.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
jennifer hord
One of the most enthralling and experimental books of the twentieth century. It is my favorite book by Faulkner and a cornerstone of modernist literature. It opens up new secrets with each successive reading. A "must-read" for understanding the South!
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
emily coleman
This is a difficult read but well worth the effort. The book is beautifully written with some very compelling characters that are symbolic of their world and times. Faulkner’s The Sound and the Fury is a masterpiece of Southern literature that captures the tragic fall of a family and a way of life. Be ready to think deeply.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
kalilah
Light in August is an intensely harrowing exploration of isolation, alienation, and perseverance through the lives of three very different characters who endure parallel plights. Not only is this among Faulkner's finest, but among the finest novels of the 20th century.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
april schilpp
It's impossible to stint in praise for this extraordinary novel. What a grand pleasure! What brilliance and originality. I read this book in college, and now, nearly 50 years later, I'm reading it again--and am quite dumbfounded by the richness of its (rather rhetorical) prose. The beginning moves slowly, and the novel doesn't follow a traditional pattern of setting a scene and explicating what happens through dialogue. There is very little dialogue here. And yet...what sonorous prose, what beauty in story-telling, what half-crazy characters, what imaginative passion. And what a delight. Perhaps a strenuous delight -- for the novel is rather long -- but I, for one, was dazzled by Faulkner's brilliance and his willingness to take risks and carry his vision of a novel through. What--in the end--greatness!
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
nightfalltwen
I've tried several times but couldn't get through Benjy's chapter. But someone gave me the tip of observing who was in charge of him to get perspective. I'm glad for that tip so I didn't miss out on a wonderful book. The only thing worse than reading Faulkner is not reading Faulkner.
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
stephen
I mean, its one of the classics. I personally didn't care for it a lot. It very much feels like Faulkner was attempting to write a novel knowing what he needed to do so people would talk about it. If you are familiar with who Faulkner was as a person then this type of pretension makes sense. It lacks the wholeness that makes Gatsby so wonderful. It feels like Faulkner is attempting to make the deeply flawed characters of Sun Also Rises, but lack the ability to actually pull it off, instead just making the characters almost pointlessly odd and hard to figure out. But, that's just, like, my opinion man. Still kind of fun.
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