BOOKS DISCUSSED IN THIS ESSAY
Penguin, 724 pp., $9.95
University of Tennessee Press, 286 pp., $14.95 (paper)
Yale University Press, (out of print)
Louisiana State University Press, 162 pp., $16.95
Louisiana State University Press, 181 pp., $19.95
Johns Hopkins University Press, 183 pp., $8.95 (paper)
University of Texas Press, 159 pp., $22.50
University of Wisconsin Press, 259 pp., $24.95
University of Wisconsin Press, 252 pp., $14.75 (paper)
Indiana University Press, 400 pp., $37.50
Once upon a time, a great American novelist—indeed, the greatest of his century—was languishing in public neglect, critical disdain, and near poverty, reduced to splicing and patching the scripts of other Hollywood screenwriters ('schmucks with typewriters,' as one of their employers famously defined them) to make ends meet. Those who knew the writer's novels, all but one of which were out of print, saw in him only a minor regionalist, an obscurantist, and a macabre sensationalist. One day, however, a discerning critic, awakening to the music of the writer's language and the profundity of his insight, volunteered to assemble a generous sampler that would guide new readers through his admittedly intricate fictional world—a world he had been constructing in stoic isolation for twenty years. And so it came to pass that a major injustice was rectified. Thanks to the critic's efforts, everyone soon perceived the artist in his real stature—a titan of modernism, a Balzacian chronicler of the life and history of his birthplace, and a tragic, compassionate ironist who had affirmed the values of family and community by showing what happens when those values are weakened by callous outsiders.
Review, 7717 words
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