Friday, October 29, 2010

The Grim Reaper And The Angel Of Death Also Known As Angelo Del Morte





   





"The Appointment in Samarra"


(as retold by W. Somerset Maugham [1933])

The speaker is Death



There was a merchant in Bagdad who sent his servant to market to buy provisions and in a little while the servant came back, white and trembling, and said, Master, just now when I was in the marketplace I was jostled by a woman in the crowd and when I turned I saw it was Death that jostled me. She looked at me and made a threatening gesture, now, lend me your horse, and I will ride away from this city and avoid my fate. I will go to Samarra and there Death will not find me. The merchant lent him his horse, and the servant mounted it, and he dug his spurs in its flanks and as fast as the horse could gallop he went. Then the merchant went down to the marketplace and he saw me standing in the crowd and he came to me and said, Why did you make a threating getsture to my servant when you saw him this morning? That was not a threatening gesture, I said, it was only a start of surprise. I was astonished to see him in Bagdad, for I had an appointment with him tonight in Samarra.

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Little Critters Traveling Petting Zoo At Reed School Arlington Virginia October 26, 2010

Click to enlarge the above photographs. This is for people who don't know that already.

Yesterday on the way home from the liquor store I saw 2 llamas in the school yard across the street from our house. It turns out these llamas are correctly called  south american alpacas.

   I came on home and Rachel and I went across the street to the new school where a large group of small children and teachers were gathered for The Little Critters Traveling Petting Zoo.

    The small children were having so much fun and  squealing and laughing. The animals were all domestic animals and were friendly and in very good health. You can hire one of these traveling petting zoos for your own party for $175.00 an hour. $75.00 for the next hour. Read all about them in the link below.
http://www.travelingpettingzoova.com/

    What I felt watching the animals and the children was that kids(and grown ups) that live in cities and in the suburbs are suffering from not only nature deficiency but animal deficiency as well. They may have dogs and cats or small birds or some other pets but they dont have chickens, goats,donkeys,south american alpacas,rabbits, ducks, etc.
And zoos have more exotic animals than domestic animals.

This was a lot of fun watching the animals and the small children. The children were given small bags of some pellet type food to feed the animals.
 
Here is some information on alpacas.
http://www.alpacasinternational.net/alpaca_information.htm

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Hopping A Freight Train Riding The Rails Meridian Mississippi To Birmingham Alabama Twice





In 1962 and again in 1964 I rode freight trains from Meridian,Mississippi to Birmingham,Alabama.

 I think I must have been reading far too much Thomas Wolfe and Woody Guthrie.
  The first time was around Spring Break in 1962 with Jeff Barr. We hopped the train in Meridian at night and rode all night long through pitch blackness in the crew car on the rear end of a Southern Railroad freight train. I had a toothache on that trip as I recall and we could hear the crew talking on a speaker or what I would call a squawk box. It came out sounding like a tape from the inside of a WW2 bomber.

   But no one bothered us and as I recall the crew car had something to stretch out on and even a wood burning stove.
  I think the train yard workers both times liked the idea that someone was interested in hopping freight trains. There were no railroad police or bulls to throw us off either time.


   The second time was in June of 1964 with Jack Newell. We also left at night but rode in an empty box car. When we got near Birmingham the train stopped. I stuck my head out to see where we were. It was just about daylight. I stepped back. The train lurched forward and the heavy door slammed shut narrowly missing me.

    Robert Stone in his memoir PRIME GREEN writes of riding this same train in 1959 or 1960. He was warned by a trainman to put a 2 by 4 in the door to keep it from shutting and locking him in the boxcar.

   Somehow we were not locked in the box car. But it was a long uncomfortable ride in the empty boxcar on a wooden floor.
We got off in Birmingham both times. It was taking too long and hitch hiking was faster.
   We walked through the train yard in Birmingham over what they call "the hump" where they separate the cars and they roll down a hill to various tracks to be made up in to other freight trains.
   
In 1962 Jeff and I were on the way to New York for a visit during spring break.
In 1964 Jack Newell and I were on the way to New York for the World's Fair and for Jack to visit his sister Jerry Newell. I was going on to Europe that summer after visiting my brother and going to The 1964 World's Fair.

Hopping freight trains was fun at the time but I never did it again. It was just too slow.

Monday, October 25, 2010

The Three Degrees 1974


   Somehow I missed the Three Degrees back in 1974.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Three_Degrees
There is plenty more of them on YouTube.

Sunday, October 24, 2010

New Orleans Radio 1959/60 WNOE


 Here is some information about James A. Noe the owner of the station.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_A._Noe
     In the book and movie Hall Of Mirrors by Robert Stone I am pretty sure the character Reinhardt gets a job as a DJ at a conservative radio station WUSA modeled on WNOE. The book is set in New Orleans around 1959 and James A. Noe did run for Governor with Earl Long that year.
   WNOE-FM is now a country station.
WNOE is now WLNO a Christian station.
Here is a clip from WUSA. Paul Newman plays Rheinhardt the DJ speaking to a rioting crowd at a political rally.

Saturday, October 23, 2010

Mardi Gras In New Orleans 1960 With Dick And Vinnie

This whiskey was very cheap in price in 1960. I think in New Orleans I bought it for $2.99 a fifth.
   I went to New Orleans when I was a sophomore in college with 3 friends from my fraternity. Two of the guys were from New York. One of them knew how to make our money last. We went first thing to Schwegmann's Supermarket in New Orleans.
We bought cheese and french bread and bottles of chianti. I also bought a fifth of Ten High whiskey. The link below will tell you about this famous supermarket chain.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_G._Schwegmann
   We went to the Schwegmann's supermaket on old Gentilly Road mentioned in the link above. It truly was super. And the liquor department was enormous. And the prices were low. Liquor was sold in supermarkets in New Orleans. A new idea to me at the time. I had never seen that before.

This is a photo of the back patio of Pat O'Brien's in New Orleans.

   So off we went into the old French Quarter. And more or less straight to Pat O'Brien's bar.  In the back patio large football players were playing "king of the mountain" on top of the covered fountain. All chairs and tables had been removed and the fountain covered to protect it from damage from the large standing room only crowds. The big guys would throw each other off the covered fountain to see who could be the last man standing.
http://www.patobriens.com/patobriens/havefun/our_story.asp

  I remember also that year drinking whiskey sours in the front bar. It was once listed in Esquire magazine as one of the best bars in the country. Then they had nice soft leather chairs. All that is gone now. Pat O'Brien's is not what it once was. It has been sold to some corporation who has watered down the drinks and opened Pat O'Brien's in other cities.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pat_O'Brien's_Bar
 
As the night wore on I had managed to drink all but one swallow of the Ten High Bourbon over a period of maybe 8 hours. But I was so drunk they hung me over a tree limb in the back patio. My friend Dick said" You can't finish that let me have it". I said no and finished it myself. That is the last thing I remember.

What had happened I found out later. The place had gotten so full the police closed the front door and would not let more people in. Someone had gotten mad about that and shot or shot at someone. So the police arrested a large number of people and I was just carted off unconscious in the paddy wagon because I was passed out in the back patio by the tree.
   
In the morning I woke up in a tiled room that I at first thought to be the men's room in a bus station or hotel. I sat up. Some guy said "That kid doesn't even know where he is." You are right I thought. I looked around some more. It was a large room filled with men. Finally I saw some bars on a window and wised up. We were in jail. In the drunk tank as they called it then. In New Orleans at that time in 1960 if you were hauled off as a drunk they would take you to jail for 6 hours to sober up and then let you go. As it happened I was unconscious the whole time I was in jail.  Within a few minutes they called my name and and let me go. I had been in there sleeping from around midnight until 6 a.m.

 I walked back to where our car had been. It was gone. It was daybreak on a Sunday morning. I walked along Canal Street and found one of the guys from New York named Vinnie happily drinking at the Jungle Bar. He didn't seem to care that the other guys had left us in New Orleans and gone on back home.

   So Vinnie and I walked down Canal. He was tired and wanted to sleep. So he went over and went to sleep on the Simon Bolivar monument on Canal Street. I went to a nearby A&G cafeteria to eat some breakfast. There I met a guy from Indiana who had come down on a Greyhound bus and he and I sat and talked and I looked out the window.


    After a short while I saw a police car pull up to roust out Vinnie. They were waking him up when I got over there across Canal Street. They asked for our ID's and if we had any money. We had ID's but really no money left. They told us we had to leave town right away. We said  Ok. They left and we just went on back down in the French Quarter and resumed partying.

    Pat O'Brien's was really pleasant that Sunday. The weather was nice and many people were dressed in costumes. I remember a pretty girl dressed in a polka dot dress.
  Vinnie met a man who had sailed his sailboat around from San Francisco or so he said and he was buying us drinks.

   Late that evening we decided to go home. We hitch hiked out of New Orleans. It took some time.  We were stranded out in the middle of nowhere when a car full of students from our school stopped to pick us up. Inside was one of the campus beauty queens. She told us they had been to The Blue Room in the Roosevelt Hotel to see Frankie Laine.
    It was nice and warm in the car.  It was a pleasant surprise ending to a long day.

Friday, October 22, 2010

Graduation From Murphy High School Mobile Alabama In 1958 And A Trip To Biloxi Mississippi That Night

Click to enlarge the above photo.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smirnoff

My high school graduation was in June of 1958. Murphy High School in Mobile,Alabama graduated 823 seniors and sent them out into the world ready or not.

    I had a few friends who had decided to head to Biloxi,Mississippi after the graduating ceremonies were over. That was because 18 year olds could drink alcohol in Mississippi but not in Alabama.

   I had bought two fifths of Smirnoff's vodka. The three other guys had brought along some liquor as well.

So off we went after the graduation ceremonies which were held at Ladd Memorial Stadium in Mobile. Ladd Memorial Stadium as it was then called was also home to The Senior Bowl each year as well as all the local high shool and college football games. It hosted concerts as well by the likes of Ray Charles and Brenda Lee and many others.

Click to enlarge the photos.
  It is a short drive from Mobile to Biloxi. And once you cross the state line you are street legal at 18 years of age. The Miss. folks also sold every kind of fireworks known to mankind. That stuff was also illegal in Alabama.

   When we got to Biloxi we found a motel room right on Highway 90 near the beach and the old downtown part of Biloxi. There wasn't much of a strip of nightclubs in Biloxi back in 1958.  But there were a few places. One of them was the Downbeat Lounge Jazz club mentioned in the post below.
   Now what happened that night was Gulfport High School graduated their seniors the same night as our high school in Mobile. So with all the liquor flowing some kids began to have fights. Some people seem to enjoy fighting more than anything.

 I was in the Downbeat enjoying my first taste of modern jazz. I heard there was a fight outside. I went out to look. Some really bad guy with a bad reputation was surrounded by onlookers. He was begging for someone to fight him. Someone produced a handgun and hit someone on the side of his head. I saw the bad guy from Pritchard, Alabama hit someone and I decided to go back in the nightclub. The police came and locked all my friends up as well as many of the others.

 I was very drunk from all the liquor so I went back to the Motel and went to sleep. Around 3 or 4am the phone rang. I woke up. No one else was in the room. I answered the phone. It was one of the guys wanting me to come down and bail them out. I had no money to bail them out. He sounded terrified. He said the Biloxi jail was a horrible place with only a hole in the floor to go to the bathroom. I told him I was sorry but there was nothing I could do.
   Now how it happened I do not know but all of those guys got out of jail and reappeared in the morning. Including the really bad guy from Pritchard ,Alabama. He had bragged in the past how he like to knock people's teeth out and I had heard of that so I tried to steer clear of him.

It was decided by someone that we would all drive up to Hattiesburg,Miss. So we motored on up there and drove out to Lake Shady outside of town. Here the bad guy decided he was going to part company with us. I had one fifth of unopened Smirnoff Vodka still in the car. He said to all of us that he was taking it. I saw no point in disagreeing with him so I said nothing. After the night before I was no longer thirsty and I was glad to see him go. It was a smart decision I have never regretted.
A few years  later he became a junkie and died an early death in Mobile.

Holyland, U.S.A., Inc.

Click and double click to enlarge and read.
I tore this out of a newspaper in Mobile,Alabama about 40 years ago so it is no longer current. No need to apply.
Here is a wikipedia page about another place named Holyland, U.S.A.. Maybe it is the same place maybe not. Maybe he was planning on expanding in the early 1970s.

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Modern Jazz On The Gulf Coast In The 1950s and 1960s Downbeat Lounge Jazz Club Biloxi Mississippi Long Gone

The above photo is the only one I have been able to find so far identified as being in the Downbeat Lounge in Biloxi, Mississippi. That is Lee Charlton on the drums in 1958.
The Downbeat Lounge was torn down sometime in the 1960s. The house piano player was a guy named John Probst. As I recall he was blind or near blind. He moved on over to New Orleans and recorded with Pete Fountain. But the Downbeat Lounge in Biloxi played only modern jazz.
It was a small place and a fine jazz club. It was a long narrow club with the bandstand at the back of the club. Over the bar and around the bandstand were some pictures of nude women painted on black velvet.
 I drove by the location in the late 1960s and where it had once been was now a plot of green grass outside some Motel.

Here are some reviews of Gulf Coast Jazz from that era.
And here is some more info I found on Lee Charlton.


•Lee Charlton






Born in Attalla, Alabama, the son of a salesman who played sax, trombone and drums, Lee began playing drums at age 10, and never looked back. He was twice awarded Best Drummer in Alabama state competitions, and, as a teenager began both local and road jazz gigs, influenced early on by Shelly Manne, and later by Max Roach. During the Korean conflict, Lee was fortunate to have been surrounded by excellent musicians in the Army band. Once released, he played in bands all over the South, including Don Reitan's quintet on the Gulf Coast, and in Atlanta, played a trio gig with Wynton Kelly, and enjoyed his 15 minutes of fame playing with Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie. Lee brought his New Orleans Quintet--which included pianist Ellis Marsalis and bassist Bun Blessey--to the Bay Area in 1963, where he has since made his home, playing for twenty years with fellow southerner Mose Allison, and recording with Mose, Vince Guaraldi, Van Morrison, Boz Scaggs, Beaver & Krause, pianist-composer Bryce Rohde and experimentalist Richard Waters. Lee has also played with Red Rodney, Chet Baker, Cal Tjader and Kenny Drew, and has joined Dave Grusin, Jack Sheldon, Maynard Ferguson, June Christie and Bob Cooper on various Bay Area gigs. Lee has used Verisonic drumsticks and brushes for over 30 years and endorses them.





This is an article from The Times Picayune Newspaper in New Orleans, Louisiana. It mentions a man who was the owner of the club in 1958. The author of this article made a mistake in the location of the Downbeat Lounge in Biloxi. It was not across Highway 90 from The White House Hotel.That would have been impossible.  Across Hwy. 90 was the beach and the Gulf of Mexico. The Downbeat was on Hwy 90 close to old downtown Biloxi. I believe it was located near The Buena Vista Beach Motel Hotel.

The matchbook below is from the Buena Vista Hotel. Click to enlarge.
The aerial photo above shows Biloxi,Mississippi in either the 1950s or early 1960s. Click and double click to enlarge it.  The large hotel is the Buena Vista Hotel and across from it is the Buena Vista Motel. The Downbeat Lounge Jazz Club was located near this location.
 And here is a history of the Buena Vista Hotel and what happened to it.
http://misspreservation.com/2010/04/19/paved-not-saved-biloxis-buena-vista-hotel/


Bottled-up emotion


A California vintner with ties to N.O. uncorked a 'Recovery Merlot' that sold out and raised $120,000 for local schools

Tuesday, January 10, 2006

Angus Lind





"New Orleans is the grande dame of the South. A mean woman named Katrina tore and tattered her clothes up a little bit, but she'll be back -- that's what I keep telling my friends," said Dr. Toad.



Dr. Toad is Todd Williams (aka The Toad), co-founder along with Rod Strong (The Badger) of Toad Hollow Vineyards, an award-winning winery in Healdsburg, Calif. That's the heart of wine country, 65 miles north of! San Francisco, where rolling valleys nestle alongside the Russian River.



When Hurricane Katrina struck New Orleans and the Gulf Coast, Williams and Strong knew they had to do something to help.



"I've got a lot of friends from Pensacola to New Orleans," said Williams, a half-brother of actor Robin Williams. "I lived in Biloxi and New Orleans. It just upset me so much."



So he got about 1,650 cases of what he calls "pretty doggone good wine," and had his label person put their famous caricature toad in the Toad Hollow logo standing in water, wearing a hard ! hat and tool belt and clutching a hammer. They named the vintage Katrina Recovery Merlot and added the words "Proceeds to Gulf Coast Survivor Relief" on the label.



On the back label are these words: "From Plaquemines Parish to New Orleans and from Kenner to Biloxi -- devastation. But 300 years of history and culture cannot be wiped out by one hurricane. Please help the Gulf Coast recover."



The entire release of this tasty 2001 merlot sold out in less than two weeks. Williams said the winery sold it at cost and that as a result some $120,000 will be distributed to school districts in St. Bernard Parish, Waveland and Bay St. Louis.



"We thought it would be nice to throw some money at the little guys who might not be getting mentioned as much," he said.



A character of characters, Williams tells people he is "68 going on 20." He has been involved with bars and restaurants his entire life before getting involved with the wine operation ! in 1994.



He grew up in a split home, spending time in Lexington, Ky., and Chicago before running away from home at age 15. He rode to Naples, Fla., on a Whizzer motorbike and immediately got a job in a bar, the Pelican Club. "I just loved it. I loved to drink, loved the business, right away," he said. He would go on to own his first bar at 19, and by his count owned "some 17 or so joints." He owned the Downbeat Lounge in Biloxi in 1958, across U.S. 90 from the White House Hotel, and recalled that he had to pay a bootleg fee to law authorities.



Amazing what you remember about the old Gulf Coast.



He also, along the way, worked for Hyp Guinle's Famous Door on Bourbon Street.



"There are a lot of people I care about in New Orleans and along the coast," he said. "The Brennan family supports my wine; so does Muriel's. So do a lot of people down there."



In the early '90s, Williams' wife handed down an edict: No mo! re bars. He hooked up with Strong, who, according to Williams, had lived a similar life of excess, wining and dining his way through existence.



"We were just two old farts trying to stay out of trouble, trying to retire," Williams said, "and now, hell, I'm working harder at 68 than I was at 28."



What they came up with was a plot to produce high-quality wines that are interesting but not pricey.



"We have a lot of fun," Williams said. "Our labels are silly, but our wines are good." The names aren't bad either: Cacophony Zinfandel, Eye of the Toad Dry Rose, Erik's the Red (a robust red blend) and Le Faux Frog Chardonnay. The pairing was a natural. Dr. Toad, according to the vineyard's promotional information, is "a man known around the neighborhood as one who could sell sand to a sheik, as well as a consummate storyteller."



He would handle the marketing.



Mr. Badger, "a gentleman extraordinaire, who had honed ! his palate during visits to chateaus, whilst dancing for kings... would craft the wine." That's the legend, anyway -- which Williams says "isn't far" from the absolute truth.



Whatever. What's important is that Toad Hollow raised the money and Williams himself is traveling here to distribute it. He says there's little doubt that the sirens will call and he'll also slip into New Orleans for a taste of nightlife.



And already definitely on his schedule down the road is the New Orleans Wine & Food Experience on Memorial Day weekend at the end of May.



"I'm telling all my friends to get their fannies down there," Williams said. "The city needs them."



. . . . . . . Columnist Angus Lind can be reached at alind@timespicayune.com or (504) 826-3449 begin_of_the_skype_highlighting (504) 826-3449 end_of_the_skype_highlighting.

What Makes Paris Special?


  In the video above you can get a glimpse of the cafe chairs at Cafe de Flore.
Click and double click to enlarge the videos.
Below is What Makes Paris Special Part 2.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caf%C3%A9_de_Flore
Click on the picture above to enlarge it.

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Paris Cafe Chairs La Rotonde and Cafe de la Paix

Chairs outside Cafe de la Paix. Click to enlarge.
Cafe de la Paix chairs up close. Click to enlarge.

These are the chairs at La Rotonde. Click to enlarge.
And here is their website.
http://www.rotondemontparnasse.com/zoom.htm

Le Select Cafe Chairs Paris France

Click to enlarge and view these beautiful Parisian Cafe Chairs in Cafe Le Select in Paris.

Cafe Le Rostand Paris France Across From The Luxembourg Gardens

Click to enlarge the photos. This is the cafe in the video below. The one that is too bright in the sunshine. You can tell she was sitting under an awning or in the shade when she made her video and that is why it is too bright outside in the sunshine. This is across from the Luxembourg Gardens.
   In the bottom picture note the colorful cafe chairs. All the cafes in Paris have these beautiful sturdy all weather chairs in different colors.

Monday, October 18, 2010

Paris Street Performer Tagh The Explorer


Click and double click to enlarge and go to Youtube where you will find more of this funny guy.
   He arrives on his scooter with maps and his sound system playing the music from Indiana Jones. Not in the video above but you can see him and hear that music in other videos of Tagh The Explorer on Youtube.
  I decided to add the video below. I like her comments. They are in Cafe Le Rostand which is across from the Luxembourg Gardens. This video is good at showing the "explorer" showing up with his Indiana Jones music playing and looking at his maps.  Click and double click on it to enlarge.

Robert Crumb's Mr. Natural Says "Twas Ever Thus"

I saved this from back in the 1960's. Click to enlarge the picture.

The Staples Singers



When I was driving a cab in Mobile,Alabama in 1971 I had this group in my cab. Really nice people.
I love all their music. Some people can't stand to listen to Gospel Music. They don't know what they are missing. Gospel is good roots music.
Here is another classic. Cotton Fields by The Staple Singers.

Rufus Thomas Of Memphis Tennessee Sings "Can Your Monkey Do The Dog?"



Here is the original Walking the Dog.

Saturday, October 16, 2010

Le Select Cafe Paris




Click to enlarge. This is one of many fine photos of Le Select that are on Flickr.com. Go to Flickr.com and type in Le Select and you will find them.
And try this for more on Hemingway's Paris.
http://hemingwaysparis.blogspot.com/

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Famous Writers And Where They Lived In Paris

Click on these picture postcards to enlarge.  The address above is where Oscar Wilde died. The Hotel des Beaux-Arts.
Allen Ginsberg,Jack Kerouac,William Burroughs,and Gregory Corso lived at this address which they called The Beat Hotel.


Henry Miller wrote a nice book called Quiet Days In Clichy.


There is a Hemingway bookstore next to this address today.
     I bought these postcards in small shop in the Rue Vavin some years ago. I can't seem to find them in Paris anymore. I had two others that I can remember. One for Andre Gide and one for Jean Paul Sartre. But I sent them to a friend.

Below is a good link to more writers and where they lived in Paris.
http://www.washburn.edu/reference/awp/dayfour.html

And here are a few more of my pictures. The one below is where he lived in the early 1920s with his first wife.
This plaque is on the side of the Hotel Parc Luxembourg. This is where William Faulkner lived in the Fall of 1925. I read in some book that this building was once a  stable for the King's horses. Now it is a fancy hotel.
Click on the picture above. You can just barely see the William Faulkner plaque to the right of the flower box. This is on the Rue Servandoni side of the hotel Parc Luxembourg.

Another link to Day One.
http://www.washburn.edu/reference/awp/dayone.html


The above pictures are of the entrance to the Hotel La Louisiane in the Rue de Seine in Paris. 60 rue de Seine is the address.
Click to enlarge the picture. Read the link to the hotel's website below and learn about the famous writers and musicians who stayed there. Among the writers were John Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir in 1943 and Patricia Highsmith in 1962.
http://hotel-lalouisiane.com/eng/history.html

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Books From William Faulkner's Personal Library Donated To The University Of Virginia William Faulkner Collection By His Daughter Jill Faulkner Summers




Quiet Genius At Work.

http://faulkner.lib.virginia.edu/

 The books listed below were in William Faulkner's own personal library and were donated to The University Of Virginia William Faulkner Collection by his daughter Jill Faulkner Summers.

List of the William Faulkner Library


Deposited in the Special Collections Department, July 1998

Entries preceded by an asterisk (*) indicate titles or copies not mentioned in:



William Faulkner's library, a catalogue / compiled with an introduction by Joseph Blotner. (Charlottesville : University Press of Virginia, Published in cooperation with the Bibliographical Society of the University of Virginia, 1964.)

Adams, Elbridge L. Joseph Conrad: The Man. With John Sheridan Zelie's A Burial in Kent. New York: William Edwin Rudge, 1925.

"Printed by William Edwin Rudge, Mount Vernon, New York. 485 copies, of which 450 are for sale."



Inscription: "To my Friend/Wm Faulkner/ 'our old books are haunted things,/ but in an obscure way, when they lack/ signatures'/ 'our predecessors in proprietorship shared/our tastes, at all events, and if they had/taken the trouble to write their names, they/might receive from us, and we from them,/a slight telepathic impact of a/friendly character' (Lang)."



Autograph (with inscription): Boehme.



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1933.

Bookplate: Ex Libris George De Nevers.

Aiken, Conrad. The Coming Forth by Day of Osiris Jones. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1931.

Autograph: William Faulkner/New York./1 December 1931.

Anderson, Sherwood. Dark Laughter. New York: Boni and Liveright, 1925.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowanoak. 1930.

Anderson, Sherwood. Horses and Men: Tales, Long and Short, from Our American Life. New York: D. W. Huebsch, 1923.

Autograph: William Faulkner.

Austen, Jane. Sense and Sensibility [and] Persuasion. New York: Derby and Jackson, 1857.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak/1930.

Autograph: Mrs. C. P. Miller.

Autograph: Mrs. M. E. Murry/Ripley/Miss/Jan. 20, 1906.

Balzac, Honor� de. The Chouans and A Passion in the Desert. Trans. Katherine Prescott Wormeley. Boston: Little, Brown and Co., 1896.

Autograph: William Faulkner.

Balzac, Honor� de. The Complete Novelettes of Honor� de Balzac. 1 vol. New York: Walter J. Black, 1925.



Autograph: M. C. Falkner.



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak/1933.

Balzac, Honor� de. Droll Stories. 1 vol. New York: Walter J. Black, n. d.



Autograph: William Faulkner./Rowanoak./12 September 1932.



Insert: A label from "Colt-Maker Medicated" horse feed, which was laid in as a bookmark, has been transferred to MSS Division.

Barry, Philip. Hotel Universe: A Play. New York: Samuel French, 1930.



Inscription: "To William Faulkner/with regards from/-Philip Barry-7. Dec. 1931."



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1931.



Boccaccio, Giovanni. Stories of Boccaccio. Trans. Leopold Flameng. London: N.p., n.d.



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowanoak/1 Sept. 1930.



Insert: A pipe cleaner, which was laid in as a bookmark, has been transferred to MSS Division.

Braden, Louise. Day of Escape. New York: Farrar and Rinehart, 1937.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak/December. 1937.

Brennunjáls Saga. Ed. Halldór Kiljan Laxness. Islendinga Sogur. Reykjavik: Helgafell, 1945.



Inscription: "To Mr. William Faulkner/on his visit to Iceland/in October 1955, from some/poets and writers, with the/highest esteem for his/tremendous achievements."



Autographs: From 24 Icelandic and Scandinavian writers and poets.

Brooks, Van Wyck. The World of Washington Irving. N. p.: E. P. Dutton and Co., 1944.



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak/December 1944.

*Brown, Maud Morrow. "William C. Falkner, Man of Legends." The Georgia Review 10 (1956): 421-38.

Burke, Fielding. Call Home the Heart. New York: Longmans, Green and Co., 1932.



Autograph: William Faulkner./Rowanoak./25 Aug. 1932.

Burman, Ben Lucien. Steamboat Round the Bend. New York: Farrar and Rinehart, 1933.



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1930 [sic].



Burnett, Whit, and Martha Foley, eds. Story in America: 1933-34. New York: The Vanguard Press, 1934.

Includes Faulkner's story "Artist at Home."



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1935.

Cabell, James Branch. Figures of Earth: A Comedy of Appearances. New York: Robert M. McBride and Co., 1921.



Autograph: William Faulkner/35 Van Dam St./New York City.

Cabell, James Branch. The Silver Stallion: A Comedy of Redemption. New York: Robert M. McBride and Co., 1926.



Autograph: M. C. Falkner.



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowanoak./12 Sept. 1932.

Calmer, Edgar. When Night Descends. New York: Farrar and Rinehart, 1936.



Autograph: Mrs. Faulkner.



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak/1 September 1937.

Cervantes Saavedra, Miguel de. Don Quixote. Trans. Peter Motteux. Rev. John Ozell. New York: The Modern Library, 1930.



Autograph: William Faulkner/917 Rugby Road.

Chaucer, Geoffrey. Canterbury Tales. Trans. J. U. Nicolson. Ill. Rockwell Kent. New York: Garden City Publishing Company, 1934.



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak 1938.

Chaucer, Geoffrey. Geoffrey Chaucer's The Prologue to the Book of the Tales of Canterbury, The Knight's Tale, The Nun's Priest's Tale. Ed. Andrew Ingraham. New York: The Macmillian Co., 1918.



Autograph: William Faulkner.



Autograph: William Faulkner.



Pencil sketch: R.A.F. wings, most likely by Faulkner.

Clark, Walter Van Tilburg. The Ox-Bow Incident. New York: Random House, 1940.



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1940.

Coates, Robert M. The Outlaw Years: The History of the Land Pirates of the Natchez Trace. New York: The Literary Guild of America, 1930.



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1935.

Cobb, Humphrey. Paths of Glory. New York: The Viking Press, 1935.



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak/October. 1935.

Collins, Jimmy. Test Pilot. Garden City: Doubleday, Doran and Co., 1935.



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1935.

Colony, Horatio. Free Forester: A Novel of Pioneer Kentucky. Boston: Little, Brown and Co., 1935.



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak/15 October 1935.

Colony, Horatio. Free Forester: A Novel of Pioneer Kentucky. Boston: Little, Brown and Co., 1935. (Duplicate copy).



Inscription: "William Faulkner/from/Horatio Colony/Keene N H/Nov 10 35."



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1935.

Connelly, Marc. The Green Pastures: A Fable. New York: Farrar and Rinehart, 1929.



Autograph: William Faulkner/New York./Nov. 20. 1931.



Inscription: "For William Faulkner/with admiration."



Autograph (with inscription): Marc Connelly/New York/1931.

Conrad, Joseph. A Personal Record and The Shadowline: A Confession. Garden City: Doubleday, Page and Co., 1927.



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak.

Cuthbert, Clifton. Thunder Without Rain. New York: William Godwin, 1933.



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak, 1933.

Dante Alighieri. The Divine Comedy of Dante Alighieri. Carlyle-Wicksteed trans. New York: The Modern Library, 1932.



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak, 1938.

Daudet, Alphonse. The Works of Alphonse Daudet. 1 vol. New York: Walter J. Black, 1929.



Autograph: M. C. Falkner.



Autograph: M. C. Falkner.



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak./1 Sept. 1932.



Insert: A thank-you note with envelope from Holland [Falkner] to Mrs. William Faulkner, dated May 20, 1942, which was laid in, has been transferred to MSS Division.



Defoe, Daniel. Adventures of Robinson Crusoe. Ed. T. W. Silverdale. London: Longmans, Green & Co., 1908.



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak 1930.

Defoe, Daniel. The Fortunes and Misfortunes of the Famous Moll Flanders. New York: The Modern Library, 1926.



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowanoak. Dec 1933.

Dickens, Charles. The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club. New York: The Modern Library, 1932.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak 1940.

Dostoyevsky, Fyodor. The Brothers Karamazov. Trans. Constance Garnett. New York: Grosset and Dunlap, n.d.

Inscription: "Dear Faulkner/Having no book of my own/to give you, I give you/the book I wish I could/have written./With much admiration."



Autograph (with inscription): Wili Lengel/New York/November 16-1931.



Autograph: William Faulkner/New York. 16 Nov. 1931.



Inserts: A letter from Jill [Faulkner Summers] to William and Estelle Faulkner, and a postcard to William Faulkner from Dean [Falkner], dated June 19, 1957, which were both laid in, have been transferred to MSS Division.

Dostoyevsky, Fyodor. Poor People. New York: Boni and Liveright, 1917.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowanoak/1 April 1932.

Douglas, Henry Kyd. I Rode with Stonewall: Being Chiefly the War Experiences of the Youngest Member of Jackson's Staff from the John Brown Raid to the Hanging of Mrs. Surratt. Chapel Hill: U of North Carolina P, 1943.

Autograph: William Faulkner.

Douglas, Norman. South Wind. New York: Boni and Liveright, 1925.

Dudley, Dorothy. Forgotten Frontiers: Dreiser and the Land of the Free. New York: Harrison Smith and Robert Haas, 1932.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1934.

Dumas, Alexandre (p�re). The Royal Life-Guard: Or, The Flight of the Royal Family: A Historical Romance of the Suppression of the French Monarchy. Trans. Henry Llewellyn Williams. Queen's Necklace and Taking of the Bastile [sic] Series. New York: W. L. Allison Co., 1893.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1933.

Duncan, Isadora. My Life. New York: Boni and Liveright, 1927.

"This presentation edition of My Life has been especially printed for the authors and other friends of Boni and Liveright. The edition is limited to 650 copies, none of them for sale. Copy Number 162, January 1928."



Autograph: William Faulkner/Oxford, Miss/24 Febry 1928.

Dunsany, Lord [Edward John Moreton Drax Plunkett]. Don Rodriguez: Chronicles of Shadow Valley. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, The Knickerbocker Press, 1922.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowanoak/12 September 1932.

Edwards, Harry Stillwell. Eneas Africanus. N. p.: The Book Club of Texas, 1930.

"Three Hundred Copies of this book were printed by the Marchbanks Press, New York, June 1930. As Mr. Marchbanks is a printer from Texas, the book club feels that the book may properly be called a native product. Number 43."



Autograph: William Faulkner/RowanOak./12 September 1932.

Elam, Samuel Milton. Watch the Stars Immortal. New York: Harper and Brothers, 1931.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Oxford, Miss./20 December 1931.

Eliot, George [Marian Evans]. Silas Marner. Ed. Edward L. Gulick. New York: The Macmillan Co., 1923.

Autograph: Dean Falkner/University/Miss.



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak, 1936.

Emerson, Ralph Waldo. The Complete Writings of Ralph Waldo Emerson. 2 vols. New York: Wm. H. Wise and Co., 1929.

Autograph in both vols.: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak/December. 1945.

*Falkner, W[illiam] C. Rapid Ramblings in Europe. Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott and Co., 1884.

Farrell, James T. Studs Lonigan: A Trilogy Containing Young Lonigan, Young Manhood of Studs Lonigan, Judgment Day. New York: The Modern Library, 1938.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak 1938.

*Faulkner, William. As I Lay Dying. New York: Jonathan Cape and Harrison Smith, 1930.

*Faulkner, William. As I Lay Dying. London: Chatto and Windus, 1935.

Insert: A presentation card from Chatto and Windus dated September 26, 1935, which was laid in, has been transferred to MSS Division.

*Faulkner, William. Dr. Martino, and Other Stories. New York: Harrison Smith and Robert Haas, 1934.

*Faulkner, William. Dr. Martino and Other Stories. London: Chatto and Windus, 1958. Vol. 3 of The Collected Short Stories of William Faulkner. 3 vols.

*Faulkner, William. The Hamlet. London: Chatto and Windus, 1940.

*Faulkner, William. Intruder in the Dust. 2nd print. New York: Random House, 1948.

Inserts: A list of 61 names and assorted addresses with check marks on page printed W. F. Fielden at top, and a review of Faulkner's novel Pylon clipped from the "Books" section of the New York Herald Tribune, March 24, 1935, which were both laid in, have been transferred to MSS Division.

*Faulkner, William. Light in August. London: Chatto and Windus, 1934.

*Faulkner, William. Light in August. London: Chatto and Windus, 1934. (Duplicate copy).

*Faulkner, William. The Marble Faun. Boston: The Four Seas Company, 1924.

Inscription: "To Major and Mrs. L. E. Oldham,/with gratitude for many kindnesses, and a/long and charming friendship."



Autograph (with inscription): William Faulkner/19 December 1924.

*Faulkner, William. The Marble Faun. Boston: The Four Seas Company, 1924. (Duplicate copy).

*Faulkner, William. Requiem for a Nun. New York: Random House, 1951.

Autograph (in William Faulkner's hand): Estelle Faulkner



Inscription: "Estelle. fro Bill,/at Home/1 Oct 1951."



Autograph: William Faulkner/at home/12 Sept 1951.

*Faulkner, William. Requiem pour une nonne: Pi�ce en deux parties et sept tableaux. Adapt. Albert Camus. N. p.: Librairie Gallimard, 1956.

*Faulkner, William. Sanctuary. London: Chatto and Windus, 1931.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Oxford, Miss./22 September 1931.

*Faulkner, William. Sanctuary. London: Chatto and Windus, 1931. (Duplicate copy).

*Faulkner, William. Sanctuary. The Modern Library 61. New York: The Modern Library, 1940[?].

Insert: A blank memo, signed "Evelyn Brehm," which was laid in, has been transferred to MSS Division.

*Faulkner, William. Sanctuary. London: Chatto and Windus, 1952.

*Faulkner, William. Soldier's Pay. New York: Boni and Liveright, 1926.

*Faulkner, William. The Sound and the Fury. London: Chatto and Windus, 1931.

Autograph: Falkner.

*Faulkner, William. The Sound and the Fury. (Duplicate copy).

*Faulkner, William. These Thirteen. New York: Jonathan Cape and Harrison Smith, 1931.

"Of this special edition 299 copies (of which 289 are for sale) were printed for Jonathan Cape and Harrison Smith in August, 1931. Each copy is signed by the author. This copy is number 146."



Autograph (in William Faulkner's hand): Estelle Faulkner/Oxford, Miss/September 29, 1931.



Autograph: William Faulkner



Inscription: "Estelle and William, for Alabama, our daughter."

*Faulkner, William. These Thirteen. New York: Jonathan Cape and Harrison Smith, 1931.

*Faulkner, William. These Thirteen. (Duplicate copy).

Inscription: "To Jack, from Bill/September 29, 1931/Oxford, Miss."



Autograph: William Faulkner/Oxford, Miss./Sept. 29, 1931.

*Faulkner, William. These Thirteen. London: Chatto and Windus, 1933.

Insert: A presentation card from Chatto and Windus dated September 21, 1933, which was laid in, has been transferred to MSS Division.

*Faulkner, William. The Town. New York: Random House, 1957.

Insert: A dedicatory note from Saxe Commins at Random House to William Faulkner, which was clipped in, has been transferred to MSS Division.



Inscription on note: "Dear Bill/This, the first copy/of The Town, goes off to/you with great pride and love./Saxe/Feb. 18, 57."



*Faulkner, William. The Town. (Duplicate copy).

Inscription: "To Helen and Burke Summers/William Faulkner."



Autograph: William Faulkner/Charlo'sville/20 April 1957.

Fielding, Henry. The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling. New York: The Modern Library, 1931.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Oxford, Miss./19 December 1931.

Fielding, Henry. The Life of Jonathan Wild. London: Oxford UP, [1932].

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1938.

Ford, Ford Madox. No More Parades. New York: Grosset and Dunlap by arrangement with A. and C. Boni, 1925.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak/20 Oct. 1938.

Fowler, Gene. Salute to Yesterday. New York: Random House, 1937.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1937.



Inscription: "To Bill Faulkner/after a shotgun/wedding with the Muse./Regards."



Autograph (with inscription): Gene Fowler/Fire Island, Aug. 1937.

Fox, Paul Hervey. Sailor Town. London: Victor Gollancz, 1935. (Paper. Uncorrected proofs).

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1935.

France, Anatole. The Red Lily. New York: Boni and Liveright, [1917].

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak./Apl 15. 1932.

France, Anatole. The Revolt of the Angels. Trans. Mrs. Wilfrid Jackson. London: John Lane, The Bodley Head; New York: Dodd, Mead, and Co., 1929.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowanoak./12 September 1932.



Autograph: Maud Falkner.

Freund, Philip. The Snow and Other Stories. New York: Pilgrim House, 1935. (Advance copy, paper).

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1936.



Insert: A pamphlet entitled, "The Critical Reception of Philip Freund's The Snow," which was laid in, has been transferred to MSS Division.

Gibbs, A. Hamilton. Soundings: A Novel. 1924. New York: A. L. Burt Co., 1926.





Autograph: Maud Falkner.



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1937.



Gowen, Emmett. Mountain Born. Indianapolis: The Bobbs-Merrill Co., 1932.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowanoak./12 Sept. 1932.



Graves, Robert. Claudius the God and his Wife Messalina. New York: Harrison Smith and Robert Haas, 1935.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak, 1934.

Graves, Robert. I, Claudius. New York: Harrison Smith and Robert Haas, 1934.





Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1935.

Hammett, Dashiell, ed. Creeps by Night: Chills and Thrills. Ed. Dashiell Hammett. New York: The John Day Co., 1931.

Includes Faulkner's "A Rose for Emily."



Autograph (in William Faulkner's hand): Estelle and William Faulkner--Oxford, Miss.



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowanoak./25 Nov 1932.

Hardy, Thomas. The Mayor of Casterbridge. New York: The Modern Library, [1917].

Autograph: William Faulkner.



Autograph: William Faulkner.

Harris, George Washington. Sut Lovingood. Yarns Spun by a "Nat'ral Born Durn'd Fool" Warped and Wove for Public Wear. New York: Dick and Fitzgerald, 1867.

Autograph: M. C. Falkner.



Autograph: William Faulkner./Rowanoak./12 September 1932.

Hart, Moss, and George S. Kaufman. Once in a Lifetime: A Comedy. New York: Farrar and Rinehart, 1930.

Inscription: "To Bill Faulkner--/Thanks to Hart and/Kaufman--you can/live over again your/recent N. Y. Trip--a la/movieland--/Regards."



Autograph (with inscription): 4/25/32 A. Arthur Halle.



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowanoak./1 April. 1932.

Havighurst, Walter, ed. Masters of the Modern Short Story. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Co., 1945. Includes Faulkner's "The Bear."

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak 1945.

*Hemingway, Ernest. The Old Man and the Sea. N.p.: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1952. (Paper. Uncorrected proofs).

Note: Title and publication data on paper cover in William Faulkner's hand.

Hemingway, Ernest. To Have and Have Not. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1937.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1938.

Henry, Robert Selph. "First with the Most": Forrest. Indianapolis: The Bobbs-Merrill Co., 1944.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak/June 1945.



Insert: A postcard to William Faulkner from the Lafayette ASC County Committee of the United States Department of Agriculture Commodity Stabilization Service, dated August 23, 1961 and laid in as a bookmark, has been transferred to MSS Division.

Hoel, Sigurd. One Day in October. Trans. S�lvi and Richard Bateson. New York: Coward- McCann, 1932.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1932.



Hubbard, John Milton (Company E, 7th Tennessee Regiment, Forrest's Cavalry Corps, C. S. A.). Notes of a private. Memphis: E. H. Clarke and Brother, 1909.

Autograph: J. W. T. Falkner/Oxford/Miss/Nov. 2nd, 1909.



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1933.



Hughes, Richard. A High Wind in Jamaica: [The Innocent Voyage]. New York: The Modern Library, 1932.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak/1 July, 1940.



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak/1 July.1940.

Hughes, T[homas]. Tom Brown at Oxford. New ed. New York: Macmillan and Co., 1885.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1933.



Autograph: M. C. Falkner/Xmas-1888-

Hugo, Victor. Les Mis�rables. Trans. Isabel F. Hapgood. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell and Co., 1887.

Autograph: Mrs. John Falkner/Oxford/Miss.



Autograph: M. C. Falkner.



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1933.

Hugo, Victor. Les Mis�rables. 2 vols. [New York]: T. Nelson and Son, [1927]. (Vol. 1 is missing).

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1938.

Hugo, Victor. 'Ninety-Three. [New York]: T. Nelson and Son, [1927].

Autograph: M. C. Falkner Jr.



Autograph: William Faulkner/917 Rugby Road.



Hugo, Victor. The Works of Victor Hugo. 1 vol. New York: Walter J. Black, 1928.



Autograph: M. C. Falkner.



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowanoak./1 Sept. 1932.

Ibsen, Henrik. The Works of Henrik Ibsen. 1 vol. Walter J. Black, 1928.

Autograph: M. C. Falkner.



Autograph: M. C. Falkner.



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowanoak./1 Sept. 1932.

[Irving, Washington]. The Sketch-Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent. Chicago: The Henneberry Co., n.d.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1929.

Josephus, Flavius. The Works of Flavius Josephus, the Learned and Authentic Jewish Historian. To Which Are Added Three Dissertations, Concerning Jesus Christ, John the Baptist, James the Just, God's Command to Abraham, etc. With a Complete Index to the Whole. Trans. William Whiston. Auburn and Rochester: Alden and Beardsley, 1856.

Inscription: "John W. T. Falkner's/book, bo't at Pontotoc/Miss--the 24. Oct. 1857/by John W. Thompson for/his adoptive son/J. W. F."



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1933.



Joyce, James. A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man. New York: The Modern Library, 1928 [?].

Autograph: William Faulkner/Oxford, Miss/1 August 1931.

Joyce, James. Ulysses. 4th print. Paris: Shakespeare and Co., 1924.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1924.

Levin, Meyer. The Old Bunch. New York: The Viking Press, 1937.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1937.

Lewis, Cecil. Sagittarius Rising. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Co., 1936.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1937.

Lewisohn, Ludwig, ed. A Modern Book of Criticism. The Modern Library. New York: Boni and Liveright, 1919.

Autograph: J. Hamilton Basso.



Autograph: J. Hamilton Basso/December 7, 1923.



Autograph: William Faulkner.



Note (in Faulkner's hand, p. 16): "True, true, true, to have said: One must understand a thing to love it--how/cold, cold. But to love and forgive--well, at sight, is better/than comprehension. A day thing at best."



Note (in Faulkner's hand, p. 74): "I'll be goddamned if I ever read such a bulging/mess of sweetness and light in my life. Imagine/a fattish man with a blond well-nourished moustache/carrying a flash light, and you've got the picture./What is the matter with these Huns? They composed/music nice, nice some of their painted pictures;/but now they cant [sic] even seem to win bicycle/races with dignity. But I retract: Mr Ludwig/Lewisohn must have translated this stuff."



Note (in Faulkner's hand, p. 79): "As the young fish, staring up through the ice at/the lady skaters, said: 'For Christ's sake.'"



Note (in Faulkner's hand, p. 84): "You damn right. It takes a good short-stop to/report a baseball game./Mencken on a hobby-horse; Billy Sunday having/a nightmare in the Browning society./His idea seems to be to take the toy train someone/else has made, and make a toy aeroplane of it./When a man lets the sheer physical pleasure of a galloping/pen get him he should by all means confine himself to/vagueness, else some/dull soul may prove facts on him afterward."



Note (in Faulkner's hand, after advertisements at end): "Bunk. It takes a German to accept an arbitrary and usually/false premise and arrive with unimpeachable logic at a con-/clusion not only unsound but usually impracticable. Goethe,/ for instance. Quite correct here, for Goethe deliberately/made himself a poet, and so is unique in all history./Shakespeare: after money and position, at least trying to/write plays/--taking the first thing that came to hand, which was the/stage/--becomes a poet by accident; Shelly [sic] trying/to fancy himself an atheist and a democrat, Keats trying/to seduce Fannye Brawne with words, Verlaine washing/his emotional dirty linen, Swinburne like a bird in the/top of a tree--all became poets by accident. What/did they care about establishing any correlation between/the important facts of hunger and sex and death/and any sort of spiritual world? Bunk. A real poet/hasn't got time to do that. Particularly as the German/critics are sure to do it for him, overreading him/with the bland courtesy of undertaking that appears before the/enjoie[?] is even dead. Stick to your music, ye logical/dull men. Let the French who are aware of the/utter unimportance of ideas, make criticism./Vide Wm. Pottlesy 2? September 1925/Normandy."



Inserts: 5 strips of paper, which were laid in as bookmarks, have been transferred to MSS Division.

Ludwig, Emil. The Nile: The Life-Story of a River. Trans. Mary H. Lindsay. New York: The Viking Press, 1937.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1938.

Lumpkin, Grace. To Make My Bread. New York: The Macaulay Co., 1932.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowanoak./1 Sept. 1932.

Macaulay, Rose. The Shadow Flies. New York: Harper and Brothers, 1932.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak/October 28 1932.



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak/28 October 1932.

Malraux, Andr�. Man's Fate (La Condition humaine). Trans. Haakon M. Chevalier. New York: Harrison Smith and Robert Haas, 1934.

Autograph: William Faulkner/RowanOak./19 Feb 1935.

Malraux, Andr�. Man's Hope. Trans. Stuart Gilbert and Alastair Macdonald. New York: Random House, 1938.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak/9 October 1938.

Mann, Thomas. Buddenbrooks. Trans. H. T. Lowe-Porter. New York: The Modern Library, 1924.

Autograph: William Faulkner.



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1940.

Mann, Thomas. Stories of Three Decades. Trans. H. T. Lowe-Porter. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1936.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Beverley Hills. Cal./14 June 1937.

March, William. Company K. New York: Harrison Smith and Robert Haas, 1933.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1935.



Maugham, W. Somerset. Of Human Bondage. New York: The Modern Library, [1930].



Autograph: William Faulkner.



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak/1 July. 1940.

Maupassant, Guy de. The Complete Short Stories of Guy de Maupassant. 10 vols. in 1. New York: Walter J. Black Co., 1903.

Autograph: M. C. Falkner.



Autograph: M. C. Falkner.



Autograph: William Faulkner./Rowanoak./1 Sept. 1932.

McFee, William. Watch Below: A Reconstruction in Narrative Form of the Golden Age of Steam When Coal Took the Place of Wind and the Tramp Steamer's Smoke Covered the Seven Seas. New York: Random House, 1940.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. Dec. 1940.

Melville, Herman. Moby Dick: Or, The Whale. New York: Random House, 1930.

Inscription: "For 'Bill' Faulkner--/from Random House &/The Modern Library."



Autograph: William Faulkner/New York/26 Oct 1931.



Millay, Edna St. Vincent. Aria da Capo: A Play in One Act. New York: Mitchell Kennerley, 1921.

Autograph: William Faulkner.

A Miscellany of American Poetry: 1920. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Howe, 1920.

Inscription (unsigned): "Love to Bill on his/birthday, September, 1920."



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1930.

O'Brien, Edward J., ed. The Best Short Stories of 1931 and the Yearbook of the American Short Story. New York: Dodd, Mead and Co., 1931.

Includes Faulkner's "That Evening Sun Go Down."



Autograph: William Faulkner/Oxford, Miss/20 December 1931.

O'Brien, Edward J., ed.The Best Short Stories, 1937 and the Yearbook of the American Short Story. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1937.

Includes Faulkner's "Fool About a Horse."



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1937.

O'Brien, Edward J., ed.. The Best Short Stories, 1940 and the Yearbook of the American Short Story. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1940.

Includes Faulkner's "Hand Upon the Waters."



Autograph: Fielden.



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1940.

O'Donnell, E. P. Green Margins. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1936.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1937.

O'Flaherty, Liam. Mr. Gilhooley. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Co., 1927.

Autograph: William Faulkner.

Paul, Elliot. The Last Time I Saw Paris. New York: Random House, 1942.

Autograph: William Faulkner.



Autograph: William Faulkner/1 May. 1942.

Poe, Edgar Allan. The Works of Edgar Allan Poe in One Volume: Complete Tales and Poems. New York: Walter J. Black, 1927.





Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1933.

Pratt, Fletcher. Ordeal by Fire: An Informal History of the Civil War. New York: Harrison Smith and Robert Haas, 1935.

Autograph: William Faulkner.

Proust, Marcel. Remembrance of Things Past. 2 vols. New York: Random House, 1932-34.

Autographs in both vols.: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1941.



Insert: An emery board, which was laid in vol. 1 as a bookmark, has been transferred to MSS Division.



Insert: A business card, an advertiser's postcard, and a postcard with attached cartoon dated December 30, 1952 and addressed to "Mr. Pat Stamper, horsetrader, care of Mr. William Faulkner" from Ralph Everly, which were all laid in, have been transferred to MSS Division.



Rabelais, Fran�ois. Gargantua and Pantagruel. Ed. Donald Douglas. New York: Walter J. Black, n.d.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowanoak./25 Aug. 1932.

Roberts, Elizabeth Madox. The Time of Man: A Novel. New York: The Viking Press, 1926.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Oxford, Miss.

Roberts, Kenneth. Captain Caution: A Chronicle of Arundel. Garden City: Doubleday, Doran and Co., 1945.





Autograph: William Faulkner/December 1945.

Roberts, Kenneth. Northwest Passage. Garden City: Doubleday, Doran and Co., 1937.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1938.

Roberts, Kenneth. Rabble in Arms: A Chronicle of Arundel and the Burgoyne Invasion. Garden City: Doubleday, Doran and Co., 1945.





Autograph: William Faulkner/Los Angeles/8 Sept. 1945.

Robertson, E. Arnot. Four Frightened People. Garden City: Doubleday, Doran and Co., 1931.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Oxford. Miss/12 September. 1931.

Rutledge, Brett. The Death of Lord Haw Haw: No. 1 Personality of World War No. 2, Being an Account of the Foremost Nazi Spy and News Commentator, the Mysterious English Traitor. New York: Random House, 1940.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak/1 July 1940.

Saint-Exup�ry, Antoine de. Southern Mail. Trans. Stuart Gilbert. New York: Harrison Smith and Robert Haas, 1933.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1934.

*Scott, Evelyn. On William Faulkner's The Sound and the Fury. New York: Jonathan Cape and Harrison Smith, 1929.

"The edition is limited to 1,000 copies."

Scott, Sir Walter. Quentin Durward. Ed. Arthur Llewellyn Eno. Macmillan's Pocket American and English Classics. New York: The Macmillan Co., 1911.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1930.



Shakespeare, William. The Life and Death of King John. The New Temple Shakespeare. Ed. M. R. Ridley. London: J. M. Dent and Sons; New York: E. P. Dutton and Co., 1935.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1938.

Sheean, Vincent. The Tide: A Novel. Garden City: Doubleday, Doran and Co., 1933.

Inscription: "For William Faulkner--/A Story--."

Autograph: Vincent Sheean.



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1936.

Shelley, Percy Bysshe. The Poetical Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley. London: Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent and Co.; New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, n.d.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak 1938.

Silone, Ignazio. Fontamara. Trans. Michael Wharf. New York: Harrison Smith and Robert Haas, 1934.





Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1934.

Snow, Edgar. Red Star over China. Rev. ed. New York: Random House, 1938.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak/8 Sept 1938.

*Spratling, William. Little Mexico. New York: Jonathan Cape and Harrison Smith, 1932.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1938.



Inscription: "for Bill/with love/Bill."



Inserts: 2 blank receipts, which were laid in, have been transferred to MSS Division.

Steinbeck, John. In Dubious Battle. New York: The Modern Library, 1939.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1940.

Stribling, T. S. The Forge. Garden City: Doubleday, Doran and Co., 1931.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowanoak/1 Dec. 1932.

Stribling, T. S. The Store. Garden City: Doubleday, Doran and Co., 1932.





Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowanoak/1 Dec. 1932.

Stribling, T. S. Unfinished Cathedral. Garden City: Doubleday, Doran and Co., 1934.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowanoak. 1932.

Stucken, Eduard. The Great White Gods: An Epic of the Spanish Invasion of Mexico and the Conquest of the Barbaric Aztec Culture of the New World. Trans. Frederick H. Martens. New York: Farrar and Rinehart, 1934.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1934.



Insert: A newspaper advertisement, which was laid in as a bookmark, has been transferred to MSS Division.

Sue, Eug�ne. The Miseries of Paris. Trans. H. Llewellyn Williams. New York: The F. M. Lupton Publishing Co., n.d.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1933.



Swift, Jonathan. Travels into Several Remote Nations of the World. In Four Parts. By Lemuel Gulliver. Bound with: The Travels and Surprising Adventures of Baron Munchausen [anonymous]. New York: John Wurtele Lovell, 1880.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1933.



Inscription: "Murry Falkner--/From His Friend and Teacher."



Autograph (with inscription): R. O. Pruitt./Christmas--1881.

*Swinburne, Algernon Charles. Poems. New York: Boni and Liveright, n.d.

Autograph: W. Faulkner/Royal Air Force/Cadet Wing/S of A/Birden/Australian Wing.

Tarkington, Booth. The Beautiful Lady. Garden City: Garden City Publishing Co., 1924.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1933.

Thomson, Sir Basil. When Thieves Fall Out. The Crime Club, Inc. Garden City: Doubleday, Doran and Co., 1937.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1937.



Tolstoy, Leo. Anna Karenina. Trans. Constance Garnett. New York: The Modern Library, 1930.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak 1940.

Tolstoy, Leo. Anna Kar�nine. Trans. A. C. Townsend. New York: The F. M. Lupton Publishing Co., n.d.





Autograph: William Faulkner.

Tolstoy, Leo. War and Peace. Trans. Constance Garnett. New York: The Modern Library, 1931.

Autograph: William Faulkner/917 Rugby Road.



Insert: A Swedish newspaper clipping, dated 1954, of a photograph of Faulkner sitting at the "Voie sacr�e" of Verdun, which was laid in as a bookmark, has been transferred to MSS Division.

Trollope, Anthony. Barchester Towers. London: George Bell and Sons, 1906.

Autograph: Col. J. W. T. Falkner/Oxford/Mississippi./Dec. 25, 1907.



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1933.



Insert: An advertiser's postcard, which was laid in as a bookmark, has been transferred to MSS Division.

Twain, Mark [Samuel L. Clemens]. How to Tell a Story and Other Essays. New York and London: Harper and Brothers, 1899. Vol. 22 of Author's National Edition.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1933.



Voltaire, Jean Fran�ois Marie Arouet de. Candide. New York: The Literary Guild, 1929.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Oxford, Miss/6 Dec 1929.



Inserts: A pencil drawing of Judith holding the head of Holofernes [?], and a typed letter from "G. Hoisington" to the "Director of Naval Personnel" regarding "Don Comstock, V-7 and Sex Affairs," dated May 12, 1942, which were both laid in, have been transferred to MSS Division.

Wells, H. G. The Time Machine: An Invention. New York: Random House, 1931.

"1200 copies of this book have been printed at the Abbey Press, Gordon-Taylor, Inc., Cambridge, Massachusetts, for sale in America and England. This is copy number 363."



Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowanoak./2 February. 1932.



Welty, Eudora. Short Stories. New York: Harcourt, Brace and Co., 1949.

"Anno MCML. The first edition of Short Stories is limited to 1,500 copies, privately printed for the friends of the author and her publishers as a New Year's greeting."



Inscription: "To William Faulkner/Best regards."



Autograph (with inscription): Eudora Welty/Beaulieu, France, Jan. 1950.



Werner, E. The Master of Ettersberg. New York: The F. M. Lupton Publishing Co., 1893.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1933.

West, Nathanael. Miss Lonelyhearts. N.p.: New Classics, 1933.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak/July. 1946.

Whitman, Walt. Complete Poetry and Selected Prose and Letters. Ed. Emery Holloway. London: The Nonesuch Press; New York: Random House, [1938].

Autograph: William Faulkner/RowanOak/20 Oct 1938.

Wilde, Oscar. Salom�: A Tragedy in One Act. Ill. Aubrey Beardsley. Boston: John W. Luce and Co., 1912.

Autograph: William Faulkner.

Wilde, Oscar. The Works of Oscar Wilde. 6 vols. in 1. New York: Walter J. Black, 1927.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1933.

Williams, Blanche Colton, ed. O. Henry Memorial Award Prize Stories of 1931. Garden City: Doubleday, Doran and Co., 1931.

Includes Faulkner's story "Thrift."

Autograph: William Faulkner/Oxford, Miss./12 October 1937.

Wilson, Harry Leon. Somewhere in Red Gap. Garden City: Doubleday, Page and Co., 1916.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1930.

Wister, Owen. Lin McLean. New York: A. L. Burt Co., 1907.

Autograph: M. C. Falkner.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowan Oak. 1937.

Autograph (crossed out): John Falkner III.

[Woodson, Marle]. Behind the Door of Delusion. By "Inmate Ward 8." New York: The Macmillan Co., 1932.

Note (in Faulkner's hand): Nation [?]/20 Veasy St.

Autograph: William Faulkner/RowanOak./26 Aug. 1932.

Yeates, V. M. Winged Victory. New York: Harrison Smith and Robert Haas, 1934.

Autograph: William Faulkner/RowanOak./20 Jan. 1935.

Young, Art. On My Way: Being the Book of Art Young in Text and Picture. New York: Horace Liveright, 1928. (Leaves uncut).

"This presentation edition of On My Way has been especially printed for the authors and other friends of Horace Liveright. The edition is limited to 1,000 copies, none of them for sale. Copy number 40, Christmas 1928."

Autograph: William Faulkner./Oxford, Miss./12 Dec. 1928.

Young, Stark. The Pavilion: Of People and Times Remembered, of Stories and Places. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1951.

Inscription: Autograph (with inscription): Stark Young/August, 1951.

Zola, �mile. The Works of �mile Zola. 1 vol. New York: Walter J. Black, 1928.

Autograph: M. C. Falkner.

Autograph: William Faulkner/Rowanoak./1 September. 1932.

Zola, �mile. The Works of �mile Zola. 1 vol. New York: Walter J. Black, 1928. (Duplicate copy).

Here is another group donated by Jill Faulkner Summers:
List of the William Faulkner Library


Deposited in the Special Collections Department, October 2000

Entries preceded by an asterisk (*) indicate titles or copies not mentioned in:



William Faulkner's library, a catalogue / compiled with an introduction by Joseph Blotner. (Charlottesville : University Press of Virginia, Published in cooperation with the Bibliographical Society of the University of Virginia, 1964.)

*Alcott, Louisa May. Jo's Boys, and How They Turned Out: A Sequel to "Little Men." Boston: Little, Brown, 1904.



Autograph: William C Falkner./ 1905

*Buck, Pearl S. The First Wife and Other Stories. New York: John Day, 1933.



Autograph: William Faulkner/ Rowan Oak. 1936



*Buck, Pearl S. Sons. 1st ed. New York: John Day, 1932.

Autograph: William Faulkner/ Rowanoak./ 13 Sept. 1932

*Dumas, Alexandre. Short Stories by Alexandre Dumas. 10 vols. in 1. New York: Walter J. Black, 1927.

Autograph: William Faulkner/ Rowan Oak, 1933

Autograph: MC Falkner/ April 1929/ University/ Miss

The Holy Bible. Merrymount Press ed. 14 vols. Boston: R. H. Hinkley, n. d.

Note: Copy 236 of a 1000 copy library edition.

Autograph (Vol. 1): William Faulkner/ Rowan Oak, 1932

Autograph (Vol. 2): William Faulkner/ Rowan Oak. 1932

Autograph (Vol. 3): William Faulkner/ Rowan Oak, 1932

Autograph (Vol. 4): William Faulkner/ Rowan Oak. 1932

Autograph (Vol. 5): William Faulkner/ Rowan Oak, 1932

Autograph (Vol. 6): William Faulkner/ Rowan Oak, 1932

Autograph (Vol. 7): William Faulkner/ Rowan Oak, 1932

Autograph (Vol. 8): William Faulkner/ Rowan Oak, 1932

Autograph (Vol. 9): William Faulkner/ Rowan Oak, 1932

Autograph (Vol. 10): William Faulkner/ Rowan Oak, 1932

Autograph (Vol. 11): William Faulkner/ Rowan Oak, 1932

Autograph (Vol. 12): William Faulkner/ Rowan Oak, 1932

Autograph (Vol. 13): William Faulkner/ Rowan Oak. 1932

Autograph (Vol. 14): William Faulkner/ Rowan Oak, 1932

*Lardner, Ring W. Round Up: The Stories of Ring W. Lardner. New York: Literary Guild, 1929.

Autograph: William Faulkner/ Rowanoak./ 12 Septemb 1932

Ludwig, Emil. Napoleon. Eden and Cedar Paul, trans. New York: Boni and Liveright, 1926.

Note: Copy 231 of a 500 copy limited edition. Autograph: William Faulkner/ 7 January 1927 Insert: A letter with stamped envelope, dated September 14, [1957], from Susan Eschaulier to Jill [Faulkner Summers]. The return address given is "Monte Bello," Calamayor, Palma de Mallorca, Spain. Transferred to MSS Division.

*Malraux, Andr�. La Condition Humaine. 23rd ed. Paris: Librairie Gallimard, 1933.

Inscription: A Faulkner/ son pr�facier en France/ Andr� Malraux Autograph: William Faulkner/ Rowan Oak, 1935

McCoy, Horace. They Shoot Horses, Don't They? New York: Simon and Schuster, 1935.

Autograph: William Faulkner/ Rowan Oak, 1936

*Menninger, Karl A. The Human Mind. New York: Literary Guild of America, 1930. Autograph: William Faulkner/ Rowanoak./ 12 Sept. 1932

*M�ras, Albert, and Suzanne Roth. Petits Contes de France. H. L. Drucklieb and John W. Adams, illus. New York: American Book Company, 1916.

Autograph: William Faulkner.

*Neilson, William Allan, and Ashley Horace Thorndike. The Facts About Shakespeare. New York: Macmillan, 1920.

Autograph: William Faulkner.

O'neill, Charles. Wild Train: The Story of the Andrews Raiders. New York: Random House, 1956.

Autograph: William Faulkner/ 26 Sept. 1956

*Otis, James. Wan Lun and Dandy: The Story of a Chinese Boy and a Dog. J. Watson Davis, illus. New York: A. L. Burt, 1902.

Inscription (in Maud Falkner's [?] hand): William Falkner./ Xmas, 1905.

Porter, Jane. Thaddeus of Warsaw. New York: A. L. Burt, [190?]. Autograph: William Falkner

Roosevelt, Franklin D. The Public Paper and Addresses of Franklin D. Roosevelt: With a Special Introduction and Explanatory Notes by President Roosevelt. 5 vols. New York: Random House, 1938.

Note: Vol. 2 missing.

Autograph (Vol. 1): William Faulkner/ Rowan Oak/ 25 April, 1938

Autograph (Vol. 3): William Faulkner/ Rowan Oak/ 25 April 1938

Autograph (Vol. 4): William Faulkner/ Rowan Oak/ 25 April 1938

Autograph (Vol. 5): William Faulkner/ Rowan Oak/ 25 April, 1938

Vercel, Roger. Tides of Mont St. Michel. Warre Bradley Wells, trans. New York: Random House, 1938.

Autograph: William Faulkner/ Rowan Oak/ 8 Sept. 1938

*Wall, Evans. Love Fetish. New York: Macaulay, 1932. Autograph: William Faulkner/ Oxford, Miss./ 9 Feb 1931


Titles Postdating 1962

*Bonner, Jr., Thomas, comp. William Faulkner: The William B. Wisdom Collection: A Descriptive Catalogue. Ed. Guillermo N��ez Falc�n. New Orleans: Tulane University Libraries, 1980.

*Bonner, Jr., Thomas, comp. William Faulkner: The William B. Wisdom Collection: A Descriptive Catalogue. Ed. Guillermo N��ez Falc�n. New Orleans: Tulane University Libraries, 1980. (Duplicate copy).

*Boozer, William. William Faulkner's First Book: The Marble Faun Fifty Years Later. Memphis: The Pigeon Roost Press, 1974.

*Bungert, Hans. William Faulkner und die humoristische Tradition des amerikanischen S�dens. Beihefte zum Jahrbuch f�r Amerikastudien 32. Heidelberg: Carl Winter, 1971.

*Cox, Leland H., ed. William Faulkner: Biographical and Reference Guide. Gale Author Handbooks 1. Detroit: Gale Research Company, 1982.

*Faulkner, William. Faulkner � l'Universit�: Cours et conf�rences prononc�s a l'Universit� de Virginie (1957-1958). Ed. Frederick L. Gwinn and Joseph L. Blotner. Trans. Ren� Hilleret. N.p.: �ditions Gallimard, 1964.

*Faulkner, William. Histoires diverses. Trans. R. N. Raimbault and C�line Zins. Du monde entier. N.p.: �ditions Gallimard, 1967.

*Faulkner, William. Proses, po�sies et essais critiques de jeunesse. Ed. Carvel Collins. Trans. Henri Thomas. N.p.: �ditions Gallimard, 1966.

*Faulkner, William. Vater Abraham. Trans. Rudolf Hermstein. Frankfurt am Main: S. Fischer, 1987.

*Fowler, Doreen, and Ann J. Abadie, eds. Faulkner and the Craft of Fiction: Faulkner and Yoknapatawpha, 1987. Jackson and London: U P of Mississippi, 1989.

*Meriwether, James B., ed. A Faulkner Miscellany. Jackson: U P of Mississippi, 1974.