Classics Spin: Light in August

Light in August, by William Faulkner

Wow, I really hated this book.  I hated it so much that I had to assign myself to read 50 pages a day, and I was determined that I would not let Faulkner beat me.  I was going to beat him.   But then the election happened, and I still had 150 pages to go, and I couldn't do it.  The world is quite difficult enough, it turns out, without subjecting myself to Faulkner as well.  So I quit.

The story starts with a girl walking and hitching rides out to where she hopes to find the father of her impending baby.  She's about to give birth, her brother threw her out, and she has every faith that she will find her man and things will work out for them.  The man, of course, has changed his name and gotten involved with the illegal moonshine trade, and just as she arrives, he's found in a burning house with the murdered owner upstairs.

The murderer is Joe Christmas, an orphan who may or may not have some black ancestry.  He's obsessed with the possibility, and most of the novel is given over to his life story.

Mostly, it's horrible people doing horrible things to each other.  So I quit.  And I'll be perfectly happy never to pick up another Faulkner novel again.  He seems to have been a horrible person anyway.

Comments

  1. Wow, I've been very cautious about reading his books and now even more so. Sounds horrible and who needs more horribleness this very unsettling end of 2016. I hope you grab a comedy next!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Exactly! We don't need ANY MORE HORRIBLENESS.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Oh no I have a Faulkner on my Classics Club TBR pile too!
    Looks like I'll be putting off for much later.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Well....maybe yours won't be so bad?

    ReplyDelete
  5. Hahahahaha, this is so validating. I read this in college and absolutely hated it, and I was never sure if I legit hated this (or Richard Wright's Native Son), or if I just had exhaustion from reading two books back to back where people got hacked up. It may not be an either/or proposition. It may be that William Faulkner and Richard Wright are not for me AND I do not like reading books where people get hacked up. :p

    ReplyDelete
  6. tried F once and barfed after about ten pages; never again tx you very much... if the man had something to say, why couldn't he use real language...?

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

I'd love to know what you think, so please comment!

Popular posts from this blog

The Four Ages of Poetry

Ozathon #1: The Wonderful Wizard of Oz