Regarded as one of the most celebrated American writers and a leading figure in Southern literature, Faulkner is known for his experimental writing style, use of stream of consciousness, and works set in his fictional Yoknapatawpha County. Born in 1897 in New Albany, Mississippi, Faulkner would move with his family to Oxford, Mississippi in 1902, where he would live for most of the remainder of his life. As a child, Faulkner listened to his family tell him many stories about their experiences in northern Mississippi, and these greatly influenced his writing. He later attended the University of Mississippi at Oxford but dropped out in 1920 after only three semesters to pursue a writing career. He worked odd jobs for a time before moving to New Orleans, then a popular spot for bohemians and artists. In New Orleans he shifted his focus from poetry to prose and developed the modernist style that would define his later works. He published his first novel,
Soldiers’ Pay, in 1926, a work that was heavily influenced by his mentor, Sherwood Anderson. He wrote
Flags in the Dust, his first novel set in his fictional Yoknapatawpha County, in 1927. Faulkner published
The Sound and the Fury, one of his most famous books, in 1929. His first short story collection (
These 13) was published in 1931 and contains most of his most widely read stories, including “A Rose for Emily” and “That Evening Sun.”
Absalom, Absalom! was published in 1936 to mixed critical reviews, though in 2009 a panel of judges for the Oxford American would deem it the best Southern novel of all time. Faulkner would go on to receive the 1949 Nobel Prize in Literature. He began work on his final novel,
The Reivers, in 1961. Faulkner died in 1962 after sustaining a serious injury from falling form his horse; he is buried alongside his family in Oxford.