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Faulkner Newsletter and Yoknapatawpha Review Volume 0 Article 1 Number 2 Index (1994-2001)

12-1-2001 Index 2 (1994-2001) Lawrence Wells

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Recommended Citation Wells, Lawrence (2001) "Index 2 (1994-2001)," Faulkner Newsletter and Yoknapatawpha Review: Vol. 0 : No. 2 , Article 1. Available at: https://egrove.olemiss.edu/faulkner_nl/vol0/iss2/1

This Issue is brought to you for free and open access by the General Special Collections at eGrove. It has been accepted for inclusion in Faulkner Newsletter and Yoknapatawpha Review by an authorized editor of eGrove. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Wells: Index 2 (1994-2001) INDEX II The Faulkner Newsletter July 1994 - Dec. 2001 26 Issues, Volumes XIV iii - XXI iv compiled and arranged by Lawrence Wells

This Index is arranged by Faulkner Newsletter department or section headings. Each ⎯⎯ “Faulkner is Growing Presence on Lucy Somerville Howorth, who attended entry is referenced by volume number, issue and page in parentheses. The “Checklist” the Web.” As catalogued by Anthony Ole Miss Law School when Faulkner section is a summary of the annotated bibliography for the final twenty-six issues (XIV Kaiser in “Faulkner on the Web,” in the was a student and the two were fellow iii - XXI iv), listed alphabetically by author or title. (Note: Index I, published in 1994, Spring 1996 issue of Teaching Faulkner, members of the “Marionettes” drama references the first 54 FN issues: I i - XIV ii.) published by the Center for Faulkner group. (XVI, ii, 4) Studies at SE Missouri State University. Among websites listed is the John ⎯⎯ “On Hearing From Bell Wiley CONTENTS Padgett-designed: www.mcsr.olemiss. About a Faulkner ‘Autographing Party.’” edu/~egjbp/faulkner/intro.html; www. Interview with Faulkner’s friend, Ole General Places Associated with Faulkner empirenet.com. (XVI, iv, 1,3) Miss history professor Bell Wiley, about Notes and Articles 1 6 getting Faulkner to autograph some Book Reviews 3 Oxford, Lafayette County 6 ⎯⎯ “Love and Kisses. Tally Ho!” A photo books. Wiley and his wife Mary Frances List of Reviewers 4 New Albany 6 found in a closet at Random House‘s were among the guests photographed Reminiscences 4 College Hill 6 former offices on East 50th St. in New York by “Col.” J.R. Cofield at Faulkner’s “hunt Paris 6 is a “Col.” J.R. Cofield 1961 studio portrait breakfast” at Rowan Oak in 1938. (XX, i, of Faulkner wearing riding gear, black 4) Reproductions News Events top hat and red hunt-jacket, and holding Photos 4 Conferences 6 riding crop; Faulkner had inscribed the ⎯⎯ “Reporter in Search of a ‘Voice in the Memorabilia 5 Seminars / Symposiums 7 picture: “To Random House. Love and Wilderness’ Finds Faulkner - Marshall J. Artwork 6 Awards and Contests 7 Kisses. Tally Ho!” (XX, iv, 4) Smith Gets Two Stories, Beer, and Great Auctions / Collections 8 Photos on a Sunday Visit With the Author

⎯⎯ “New Faulkner Society Formed of Sanctuary.” Boozer recreates Memphis Obituary Notices 8 Checklist 8 in Japan.” In May, 1998, a new William Press Scimitar reporter Marshall J. Faulkner Society of Japan was organized Smith’s 1931 interview with Faulkner at by 120 scholars meeting in Kyoto, to Rowan Oak, after the sensational debut to make room for statue, “near-shouting- convene an annual conference each of Sanctuary. “Who is this man Faulkner GENERAL match” at Oxford Board of Aldermen fall and to publish a and what is he up to?” Smith’s photos meeting, opposition voiced by brothers Journal in March, to be available in of Faulkner, Rowan Oak and Oxford Notes and Articles Jimmy Faulkner and Chooky Falkner, Japanese in print edition and English illustrate story. (XX, iv, 1,3) nephews of William Faulkner. “Price online. Contact information given. (XVIII, of genius,“ observes FN editor Boozer. iv, 2) ⎯⎯ “Small Investment by a Friend of Article in The Oregon Daily Emerald, (XVII, ii, 1, 4) Faulkner’s From Childhood Is Now an student newspaper at University of ⎯⎯ “New Faulkner Foundation is Ole Miss Treasure.” On the donation of a Oregon, reporting on April 13, 1955, “Centennial Year Faulkner Homage Launched at Rennes 2.” Report on copy of The Marble Faun by Faulkner’s speech by Faulkner, “The American ⎯⎯ is Worldwide.” Commenting on Faulkner’s Faulkner Festival at Rennes 2 University’s childhood friend, Bessie Furr Sumners, Dream: What Happened to It?” Speech life and work upon the occasion of the Villejean campus in 1994, with a “Faulkner to the University of Libraries; concludes: “We didn’t abolish truth. We 100th anniversary of his birth and world and Europe” symposium directed by Sumners knew her fourth grade classmate couldn’t do that. It merely turned its back wide homage, celebrations being staged Michel Gresset, and detailing plans to simply as “little Billy Falkner.” (XX, ii, 3) on us.” (XIX, iii, 2,4) in Mississippi and other U.S. states, hold a 1997 William Faulkner Centenary England, China, Italy, Russia and the conference there. (XV, ii, 1) Brown, Larry. “Faulkner Honored for Baker, Betsy J. “Grant Lund Mural is Republic of Georgia. F & Y Conference Greatness That Holds Up a Standard for Dedicated at Center for Faulkner Studies.” draws record attendance of participants ⎯⎯ “New Curator at Rowan Oak Young Writers Everywhere.” Brown’s Mural 10’ x 9’ of Faulkner’s profile set from 40 states and nine foreign countries. Focuses on Preserving Faulkner’s Home.” tribute to Faulkner, recalling his first against map of (XVII, iv, 1) Cynthia Shearer, new curator at Rowan reading at age 16 of The Bear, which and Greek-columned mansion by Grant Oak in August, 1993, succeeds former “lives on in my mind and Ike McCaslin Lund, professor of art at SE Missouri “Chair of Faulkner Studies is curator Howard Bahr, and undertakes still walks those woods, and the bear still State University on display at the Center ⎯⎯ Funded.” The University of Mississippi transition of Faulkner’s home to museum roams, and the dogs still follow him.“ for Faulkner Studies. (XVIII, ii, 1) receives $660,000 from an anonymous standards of maintenance and operation. Excerpted from remarks at the University donor to fund a Chair of Faulkner Studies (XIV, iv, 3) of Mississippi’s Faulkner Centennial Boozer, William. “How, What to Read in the College of Liberal Arts, Chancellor celebration, Sept. 25, 1997. (XVIII, i, 3) First in Faulkner Gets Some Answers.” Robert C. Khayat announces. The ⎯⎯ “New Two-act Play Treats Faulkner’s Reprint of Boozer’s Nashville Banner th Faulkner Chair had been first established Warner Bros. Years.” In Peter Lefcourt’s “Call for Papers.” The theme of the 28 “Book Beat” article, taking suggestions with proceeds from the estate of Mary play, “Only the Dead Know Burbank,” F & Y Conference will be “Faulkner and from M. Thomas Inge, Michael Dirda, H. Howry. First holder of the Howry directed by Jeremiah Morris, a character War,” exploring the role that war played Edmond Volpe and Malcolm Cowley as to Professorship in Faulkner Studies is Dr. named Ira Krensky, who knows how in the life and work of a writer “whose how to begin reading Faulkner, whether Donald M. Kartiganer. (XVIII, i, 3) to work the Hollywood system, frees career seems forever poised against a to start with less complex works or read Faulkner from “bondage” and sends him backdrop of wars.” Though Faulkner did them in the order in which they were “Eudora Welty Earned High Marks home to his beloved Oxford, MS. (XVII, not fight in the Civil War, WWI or WWII, written. (XV, ii, 1-3) ⎯⎯ From Faulkner for ‘Doing Fine.’” On i, 2) “they are all there, in , short stories, Faulkner’s having written Welty on April essays and letters.” (XXI, i, 2) ⎯⎯ “Bronze Statue of Faulkner is Story 27, 1943, from Warner Brothers Studio ⎯⎯ “Ole Miss Library Receives of Town and Fury.” Controversy over in Burbank to congratulate her on the Howorth Copy of Marble Faun.” Thomas “C-SPAN’s Writer’s Series to Visit placement of sculptor William Beckwith’s publication of The Robber Bridegroom: Verich, University of Mississippi Library Faulkner Country.” Faulkner and Oxford statue of Faulkner, citizens’ objections to “You are doing very fine.” (XXI, iv, 4) archivist, receives donation of Faulkner’s to be subject of C-SPAN broadcasts Oct. cutting down magnolia trees at City Hall first book, The Marble Faun, from Judge 15 and Oct. 19, 2001. The series features

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“American writers who have chronicled, Hannah, Barry. “Quiet, Please.” An The Mississippi Quarterly Supplement, Ono, Kiyoyuki. Excerpt from Ono’s reflected upon, or influenced the course appreciation of William Faulkner by Vol. XLVIII (1995) “Checklist of letter to William Boozer commenting of our nation.” (XXI, iv, 4) novelist Hannah, writer in residence at Scholarship on Southern Literature for on Faulkner’s influence on Nobel Prize the University of Mississippi, of living 1994” reveals robust Japanese Faulkner winner Kenzaburo Oe. Ono’s article “The Dees, Jim. “Who, What is That in in Faulkner’s town and coming to terms studies. Of 115 Faulkner 1994 entries, 43 Japanese Reception of William Faulkner,” Faulkner Family Plot? Let Us Know If with the genius that created an As I Lay appear in Japanese language journals. in Notes On Mississippi Writers (Vol. You Find Out.” Reprint of Oxford Eagle Dying on a wheelbarrow in the coal (XX, i, 2) XVI, Nos. 1 & 2, 1984) observes that one tongue-in-cheek report by columnist room of the university power plant, “the of Oe’s characters in his Ame-No-Ki Dees on a mystery grave marked “E.T.” short man from an impoverished and Kartiganer, Donald M. “Faulkner Wo Kiku Onnatati (Women Who Listen that appeared overnight in a vacant grave whipped state, coal dust around his feet, Conference to Explore Role of Wars in to the Rain-Tree) goes to Charlottesville space next to the St. Peter’s Cemetery the scorn outside.” Reprinted from article Novels, Stories.” Kartiganer, director of to research Faulkner. (XV, iv, 2) grave of Faulkner’s stepson, Malcolm in Liberation, French daily newspaper. the F & Y Conference at the University Franklin, inside the four-grave plot of (XVIII, i, 2) of Mississippi, previews the 28th annual Owen, Jennifer Bryon. “Faulkner William and Estelle Faulkner. If any conference to focus on “Faulkner and Centennial to Bring Exhibits of Dain and family members knew about “E.T.,” they Harrelson, Michael. “Griffith Named War.” His career was “forever poised Cofield Photos and New Dain Book.” were not telling. Photos of “E.T.’s” grave. Interim Curator of Rowan Oak.” against a backdrop of wars.” Speakers Report on traveling exhibits of Dain (XVIII, iv, 3, 4) Succeeding Cynthia Shearer as Rowan include John Limon, John Lowe, Nicole photographs from newly published Oak curator is William D. Griffith, an Moulinoux, David Madden and Noel Faulkner’s World: The Photographs of “Faulkner Ranks No. 8 in ‘Who’s Hot.’” Urbana, IL, native, and an anthropology Polk. (XXI, ii, 1,3) Martin J. Dain, along with photographs The New York Times reports National and museum studies graduate of from the University of Mississippi’s Association of Scholars ranking of Southern Illinois University. Top priority ⎯⎯ “Garth, Hassan To Speak at Cofield archive containing photos by authors according to number of course is upgrading security and climate control 26th Meet.” Theme of the 26th F & Y “Col.” J.R. Cofield and son, Jack Cofield. catalog citations at 25 liberal arts colleges, systems at Rowan Oak. (XX, i, 2) Conference at Ole Miss is “Faulkner and (XVII, iii, 3) with Faulkner scoring 8th among the 25 Postmodernism.“ Highlights to include most popular authors. Shakespeare was Hickman, Lisa C. “Dramatization of John lectures by novelist John Barth, whose Pratt, William. “Miami University number one, followed by Chaucer, Jane Williams’ Essay on Faulkner Set for F & Y fiction is widely regarded as one of the Receives Mac Reed’s Prized Collection.” Austen, John Milton, Virginia Woolf, Toni Conference.” On the debut of a dramatic prototypes of the postmodern, and by Pratt, professor of English at Miami Morris and Henry James. (XXI, iii, 2) narrative, “Twenty Will Not come Again,” Professor Ihab Hassan, of the University University of Ohio and nephew of in Memphis in March, 1997, by the of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, author of Oxford pharmacist and close Faulkner “Faulkner, Hemingway Win Places on theatre group, “Voices of the South,” twelve books. (XIX, ii, 1, 2) friend McNeil (Mac) Reed, reports on Two Best-of-Century Lists.” Faulkner featuring actresses Jenny Odle and Alice the Mac Reed Collection being donated places 2nd, behind Martin Luther King, Berry. Article appeared originally in The Khayat, Robert C. “Chancellor Salutes to Miami University Libraries. Included Jr., on “20 Most Influential Southerners” Memphis Flyer. (XVIII, iii, 3) Faulkner in Conference Welcome.” in the collection are eight presentation of the 20th Century list compiled by John Excerpt of Ole Miss Chancellor Robert C. copies of novels inscribed and signed Shelton Reed and others for Southern Holditch, W. Kenneth. “ is Faulkner’s Khayat’s remarks welcoming participants by Faulkner. In , Faulkner wrote, Cultures, Vol. 7, No. 1 (Spring 2001). Eulogy to Courage of Vanishing Breed.” to the 27th F & Y Conference in July, 2000. “To Mac Reed, old friend, by dam. Bill Hemingway lauded by People for “macho On Faulkner’s experiences as a pilot, and “Somehow, out of this ordinary, even Faulkner, 21 Nov. ‘54.” (XVIII, i, 1,3) prose and a two fisted life.” (XXI, ii, 1,4) his brother Dean’s death in a plane crash, pedestrian life, [Faulkner] created his as contributing factors to the writing of striking fictional universe .… Although Shearer, Cynthia. “Curating the Quiet Faulkner, William. “His Name Was Pete.” Pylon; adapted from a paper published in this place became his postage stamp, he at Rowan Oak.” Shearer describes Reprint of Faulkner’s grieving article in The Double Dealer Redux. (XV, ii, 2-4) became a citizen of the world.” (XX, iv, the pleasure of serving as curator of The Oxford Eagle, Aug. 15, 1946, about 4) Faulkner’s home, Rowan Oak: “All it the hit-and-run death of the family’s dog, Howorth, Richard. “Citizen Faulkner Was takes is a quiet afternoon and it’s easy Pete#. “He was just a dog, a fifteen months- A Duly Registered Voter.” Newly elected Kinney, Arthur F. “Attorney Seth Berner to understand those baroque, oceanic old pointer …” run over by an anonymous Oxford mayor Richard Howorth, during Excels as Bookseller at F & Y Conference.” sentences Faulkner wrote …. The silence driver while trailing Faulkner’s daughter his first week on the job, discovers Profile of attorney and rare book dealer of the place is a huge rare artifact.” Jill during an afternoon horseback ride. Faulkner’s 1938 signature in a “Registered Berner, of Portland, ME, who since 1992 Informal descriptions of items in the (XVI, i, 1) Voters 1934-1955” ledger, alongside that has maintained an exhibit at the Faulkner house. Reprinted from Oxford Town. of his mother, Mrs. Maud Falkner. The and Yoknapatawpha Conference at Ole (XVII, iv, 1,2,4) “Filming of AILD Awaits Signing of date of the discovery was July 6, 2001, Miss for the sale of Faulkner first editions Role of Anse.” Report by Associated the 39th anniversary of Faulkner’s death. and exchange of information. (XVII, i, 4) “Stage Magic.” Heather McDonald’s play, Press of movie development of As I Lay (XXI, iv, 1,3) “Faulkner’s Bicycle,” about a fictional Dying, to be adapted by director Jerzy Kinney, Arthur F. “At Church or Home? family in Oxford in 1962 which finds itself Kromolowski. Under consideration for Inge, M. Thomas. “Faulkner’s Influence on Faulkners’ Wedding Site is Questioned.” involved with Faulkner a few months role of Anse Bundren are Nick Nolte Other Writers is Widely Acknowledged in Kinney questions the traditional belief before his death, presented at the 28th and Kevin Spacey. Kromolowski adds Acclaim Here and Abroad.” Retrospective that Faulkner and Estelle Oldham F & Y Conference at the University of that Marlon Brando has agreed to play a on reactions to Faulkner’s prevailing Franklin were married at College Hill Mississippi, July, 2001. (XXI, ii, 3) supporting role [Dr. Peabody]. (XX, ii, 2) influence, from Hemingway’s “Old Presbyterian Church. Speculates that corncob Mellifluous,” to Peter Taylor’s they instead married at the home of Stoicheff, Peter. “Winner Finds Parody “Fund Drive for Statue is Launched.” “get down on our knees every night pastor Winn David Hedleston, whose One Part Mockery, Nine Parts Reverence.” Reporting fund-raising drive in Oxford to and thank God for Faulkner. He is the granddaughter, Anne H. Danough, recalls Excerpts from Faux Faulkner winner pay $50,000 projected costs of a life-size master.” (XIX, i, 3) family account of ceremony. (XV, i, 1) Stoicheff’s remarks during the bronze statue of Faulkner, celebrating 1995 Faulkner and Yoknapatawpha the 100th anniversary of his birth in 1997. ⎯⎯ “On Faulkner’s Obscene Word.” Kolsky, Allan. “Faux Faulkner Winner Conference at the University of First National Bank and Union Planters Faulkner’s use of the obscure slang term, Gets An Autograph.” Kolsky, winner of Mississippi: “One freely parodies only Bank of Oxford each pledged $5,000. “pugnuckling,” in . (XIV, iii, 2001 Faux Faulkner Contest, writes about what is invulnerable.” (XV, iv, 3) (XVI, iii, 1) 2) meeting contest judge John Berendt, by chance, during an airlines flight from Tanzilo, Bobby. “Rare Faulkner Work a Hamblin, Robert W. “Faulkner Readers Inoue, Masaru. “On Wistaria: Fragrant New York to New Orleans. The author Moment of Pride in Schwartz History.” and Collectors Discover E-Bay.” Book Vine Evokes Study of Absalom.” Professor of Midnight in the Garden of Good and How Faulkner’s Salmagundi was collectors rejoice at bargain prices Inoue, who teaches American Literature Evil inscribed Kolsky’s copy of FN, “John published in Milwaukee in 1932, by found on E-Bay for Faulkner-related at Ferris University in Yokohama, Berendt. Seat 29C.” (XXI, iii, 4) booksellers Harry Schwartz and Paul books. Example: 1921 Ole Miss yearbook spent several sabbaticals in Oxford and Romaine, who wooed Faulkner with a containing Faulkner drawings sold for noted that when the typically spring- Mailer, Norman. “Homage to Faulkner.” query written on a cocktail napkin. The top bid of $227.50, when current asking blooming wistaria blooms in summer, Poem reprinted by permission of The result was Salmagundi, a 53-page book price by rare book dealers ranges from it is considered a harbinger of evil, as New Yorker: “Newt Gingrich looks for containing prose that had appeared from $4500 to $6000. Forty to fifty Faulkner Faulkner depicted the phenomenon in angry votes;/Ergo, he hammers welfare 1919-1925 in The Double Dealer magazine, titles listed on E-Bay and rising, with real Absalom, Absalom! (XXI, i 1,3) folks./There lie his Presidential hopes:/ and 4 Faulkner poems including L’Apres- bargains to be found. (XIX, ii, 4) Apotheosis of the Snopes.” The New Midi d’un Faun. (XVIII, iii, 4) “Japan Leads MissQ Scholarship List.” Yorker, Dec. 11, 1995. (XVI, ii, 2) https://egrove.olemiss.edu/faulkner_nl/vol0/iss2/12 2 Wells: Index 2 (1994-2001)

Verich, Thomas. “Ole Miss Acquires a and backlist titles of Yoknapatawpha Campbell, W. John. Book of Great Books: and notes by Joseph Blotner; establishing Faulkner Book Inscribed to a Horse.” Press. (XVI, iv, 1,3) A Guide to 100 World Classics. Plot authoritative texts in accordance with University of Mississippi Library summaries, background, key characters, Faulkner’s intentions. , archivist reports acquisition of a Modern ⎯⎯ “Faulkner Internet Sites.” Ten theme, symbol and style are offered for 2000. (XX, ii, 4) Library Edition of The Faulkner Reader internet sites go online, as reported by , and The inscribed by Faulkner not to a horse the Center for Faulkner Studies at SE Sound and the Fury. Barnes and Noble Furry, William. Article on finding photo- but to Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Rives, Missouri State University, reminding with Wonderland Press, 2001. (XXI, ii, 2) copies of original teleplays on deposit at owners of “Wedgewood,” a horse which Wells of a comment by a visitor at Rowan Duke University, in the Fall 2000/Spring Faulkner had ridden at “Roll Away Hills,” Oak concerning Faulkner’s tiny portable Dain, Martin. Faulkner’s World: The 2001 issue of The Faulkner Journal: Charlottesville, VA. (XIV, iii, 2) typewriter: “Just think what he could Photographs of Martin J. Dain. Foreword Faulkner’s “lost” teleplays for Lux Video have done if he’d had a computer.” (XX, by author Larry Brown, in registering his Theatre’s productions of “The Brooch,” Walton, Gerald. “No Nepotism in Young iv, 2) appreciation for photographer Dain‘s on April 2, 1953, and “Shall Not Perish,” Mr. W.C. Falkner’s Employment on work and preservation: “So much has on Feb. 11, 1954. (XXI, iv, 4) Campus.” Walton, provost and associate “Yoknapatawpha, Images and Voices.” gone, so much has changed, so much vice chancellor for Academic Affairs at Photo-essay on Faulkner country by has stayed the same.” University Press of Glissant, Edouard. Faulkner, Mississippi. the University of Mississippi, provides George G. Stewart, including places and Mississippi, 1998. (XVIII, iii, 3) In 1989 when Caribbean writer Glissant report on Faulkner-related letters objects in Lafayette, Tippah and adjoining was lecturing at Southern University in found in the inactive files of Ole Miss counties; first appeared as 22-photo-essay Devlin, Albert J., ed. Conversations Baton Rouge he determined that it was chancellor’s office. Includes reproduction in Fall, 1998, issue of Southern Culture. with Tennessee Williams. On Tennessee time “for a reconsideration of Faulkner, of Chancellor John N. Powers’ letter to Pictured here: Wyatt’s Crossing at Sardis William’s having met Faulkner in for a fresh reading and study of his a state senator concerning university Reservoir. (XXI, ii, 1) Paris and New Orleans; published by works.” Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1996. postmaster, William Falkner. (XVII, i, 1) University Press of Mississippi. Also, in (XIX, iv, 2) “Yoknapatawpha, Images and Voices.” William Wright’s Lillian Hellman: The Wells, Dean Faulkner. “Faulkner’s Niece Photograph from George C. Stewart’s Image, the Woman, Hellman’s account Hahn, Stephen, and Robert W. Hamblin, Gets Advance Viewing of Statue of Her “Yoknapatawpha” portfolio, a study of of Faulkner and Dashiell Hammett under eds. Teaching Faulkner: Approaches Pappy.” On having been invited to a Lafayette County Courthouse balcony the influence, crashing a dinner party at and Methods. Nineteen essays on nine private viewing, before unveiling, of reminiscent of : Alfred Knopf’s home; published by Simon major novels and “,” Faulkner’s statue by sculptor William N. “Oyes oyes honorable circuit court of and Schuster, 1998. (XIX, i, 2) stressing need for students to be aware Beckwith. As it is moved into position yoknapatawpha county come all and ye of “the human heart in conflict with itself” by three inmates from the city jail, she shall be heard.” (XXI, iii, 3) Doyle, Don H. Faulkner’s County: The in order to appreciate Faulkner’s work. senses her uncle’s presence and an Historical Roots of Yoknapatawpha. Greenwood Press, 2001. (XXI, ii, 2) invisible host of characters, “Ike and Hailed as “publishing event of the year Boon, Aunt Jenny and Granny Millard, in Faulkner studies” is this new history Hamblin, Robert W. and Charles A. Peek, Temple and Eula ….” Photo of statue and BOOK REVIEWS of Lafayette county, MS, and its fictional eds. A William Faulkner Encyclopedia. Beckwith. (XVIII, i, 1) counterpart, Yoknapatawpha County. Over fifty contributors and nearly 500 AND PUBLICATION University of North Carolina Press, 2001. entries “demonstrate why the critical ⎯⎯ “Faulkner’s Mother Gets Her Own ANNOUNCEMENTS (XXI, iv, 2) estimation of [Faulkner’s] work is so ‘Hoorahs’ in First Art Exhibit.” Tribute secure and still growing.” Greenwood to artist Maud Butler Falkner, mother of Duclos, Donald P. Son of Sorrow: The Life, Press, 1999. (XX, i, 1) The following reviews in FN (1994-2001) William Faulkner, by her granddaughter, Works and Influence of Colonel William are listed alphabetically by author or title. Dean Faulkner Wells, upon the occasion C. Faulkner, 1825-1889. Forewords Hines, Thomas S. William Faulkner FN volume and issue numbers and page of her posthumous, first art exhibit by Stephen Hahn and Arthur F. Kinney. and the Tangible Past: The Architecture numbers appear at the end of each entry; held at the University of Mississippi’s Previously available only on microfilm. of Yoknapatawpha. Hines, professor reviewers are listed chronologically at Skipwith Museum. “Miss Maud,” who International Scholars Publications, of cultural, urban and architectural the end of this section. painted hundreds of portraits and florals, 1997. (XVIII, ii, 3) history at UCLA, assesses how fictional was heard to say, “Grandma Moses is not Yoknapatawpha architecture mirrors the the only old-lady painter in the world.” Faulkner, John. My Brother, Bill. First actual architecture of Oxford and the Bleikasten, Andre, Michel Gresset, Expanded from article in Southern published by Trident Press in 1963, the surrounding area. University of California Nicole Moulinoux and Francois Pitavy, Living, Sept., 1997. (XVII, iv, 1) year following William’s death. Previously Press, 1996. (XVI, ii, 2) eds. Naissances de Faullkner, Etudes in print as a Pocket Cardinal paperback, Faulkneriennes II. 19 essays by noted “Henry Falkner Rescued from Linen Oct. 1964, and a hardcover edition by Inge, M. Thomas, ed. Conversations With Faulkner scholars from several countries. Closet by his Great-Great-Niece.” Wells Yoknaptawpha Press, Feb. 1975. Fourth William Faulkner. Further research turns Published at Presses Universitaires writes of discovering a dust-covered edition by Hill Street Books, Athens, GA., up unpublished interviews with Faulkner de Rennes by the Fondation William oil portrait which her grandmother 1998. (XIX, i, 3) dating from 1916 to 1962. University Faulkner, France, in celebration of the Maud Butler Falkner had stored. Dean’s Press of Mississippi, 1999. (XX, ii, 2, 4) centennial of Faulkner’s birth. (XX, iii, mother, Louise Hale Faulkner Meadow, Faulkner, William. “Lucas Beauchamp.” 4) confirmed that the subject in the painting Introduction by the Rev. Patrick Samway, ⎯⎯ The Achievement of William was Dean’s great-great-uncle, Henry SJ. The Virginia Quarterly Review, Faulkner: A Centennial Tribute. The Boozer, William, Dean Faulkner Wells Falkner, son of William Clark Falkner, Summer 1999. Previously unpublished proceedings of the C. William Gibson and Lawrence Wells, eds. The Faulkner “the Old Colonel,” of Ripley, killed at age Faulkner excerpted from Symposium in obervance of the Faulkner Newsletter: Collected Issues, containing 24 by a jealous husband, over Henry’s in 1948 had been centennial, held at Randolph-Macon first 54 issues, 1981-1994, with Index, dalliance with the man’s wife, in 1878. rejected by The Atlantic Monthly and College. Papers by Joseph Blotner, in a printing of 400 bound volumes, (XVI, ii, 1,3,4) Harper’s. (XX, i, 2) Thadious M. Davis, Lothar Honnighausen with copies numbered 1-350 for sale. and Dorothy M. Scura. Includes Inge’s 1958 Yoknapatawpha Press, 1994. (XIV, iv, 2) Wells, Larry and Dean Faulkner Wells. ⎯⎯ Novels 1942-1954; Go down, sketch and interview with Faulkner in The “Newsletter Rate Hike Announced.” Moses, Intruder in the Dust, Requiem Yellow Jacket Weekly student paper at Brodsky, Louis Daniel. Disappearing Notice of increase in subscription rates; for a Nun, A Fable. Third volume in the Randolph-Macon. Published by Randolph- in Mississippi Latitudes. Volume and a fond farewell and thank-you to Library of America’s authoritative new Macon College, 1997. (XVIII, iii, 4) Two of A Mississippi trilogy, poems by subscribers in case FN publication edition of Faulkner’s complete works, Brodsky. Book jacket features a photo of should cease at year’s end. [NOTE: Vol. based on study of Faulkner’s manuscripts, Kajima, Shozo, translator. The Bear and Faulkner’s home, Rowan Oak. Published XXI, No. 4, Oct-Dec 2001, was the final typescripts and proof sheets restored to Three Other Stories, by William Faulkner. by Time Being Books, 1995. (XV, iv, 2) FN issue.] (XXI, iv, I) their original form. Edited by Noel Polk Cover illustration of Faulkner and figure and Joseph Blotner. Library of America, of a bear by Kajima, who participated Bruccoli, Matthew J. ed. Conversations Wells, Lawrence. “Faulkner Newsletter 1995. (XV, iii, 4) in Faulkner‘s 1955 Nagano Seminar. With Ernest Hemingway. Quotes Mary is Online.” Wells, Co-Publisher of The The other stories are “The Old People,” Harrington: “[Hemingway] says William Faulker Newsletter, announces internet ⎯⎯ Novels 1957-1962. Fourth and last “A Bear Hunt,” and “Race at Morning.” Faulkner is the best living [writer].” home page at http://www.watervalley. Library of America volume of Faulkner’s Iwanami Publishing Co., 2000. (XXI, i, 4) Robert Manning: “[Hemingway] said, net/yoknapatawphapress containing Yoknapatawpha novels, containing The “Cut me up and feed me to Faulkner.” listings for newsletter, Faux Faulkner Town, and The Reivers, Kartiganer, Donald M. and Ann J. Abadie, University Press of Mississippi, 1996. contest rules of submission and current edited by Noel Polk, with chronology eds. Faulkner At 100: Retrospect and (XVI, ii, 2)

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Prospect. Tributes to Faulkner given Magazine, May, 1954, and was reprinted summer of 1958, with two friends, all in at 1997 F & Y Conference bring full in Essays, Speeches and Public Letters, REMINISCENCES their early twenties. Faulkner cordially range of critical approaches to what edited by James B. Meriwether. Reuss received them and discussed weather, Andre Bleikasten calls Faulkner’s and Staengle used the original typescript Foster, Ruel E. “Faulkner Studies Pioneer hunting, dogs and literature. Faulkner “abiding singularity.” University Press of at Princeton University. Frankfurt: Recalls the Beginning.” Retrospective on instinctively was aware that Whitehead Mississippi, 2001. (XXI, ii, 2) Stroemfeld Verlag, 2000. (XXI, ii, 4) Faulkner studies and living in Oxford was a writer and encouraged him to in 1949 by Foster, professor emeritus at “keep it up.” (XX, i, 1,3,4) Littleton, Taylor D. The Color of Singal, Daniel J. William Faulkner: The West Virginia University, who taught at SilverWilliam Spratling: His Life and Making of a Novelist. The turning point Ole Miss in the summer of 1949 along with Wilkinson, Bob. “Visitor to Rowan Art. Account in Chapter Two of friendship in Faulkner’s conflict between a Victorian Harry Campbell, where they befriended Oak Recalls Bourbon and Hospitality.” and travels of Faulkner and New Orleans upbringing and a Modernist world was William’s brother, John Faulkner, the Wilkinson, a friend of Dean Faulkner roommate, William Spratling, draws on his 1925 sojourn in Paris, where he attorney Phil Stone and his wife Emily, Wells, remembers having drinks and previously published accounts. Louisiana attempted to write an “au courant novel” and Carvel Collins, a fellow pioneer in hors d’oeuvres at Rowan Oak in 1960 State University Press, 2000. (XXI, i, 4) called Elmer, and failing this wrote Faulkner studies. (XVIII, iv, 1,3) at a gathering hosted by Faulkner and , crossing over from fin de wife Estelle honoring their niece Dean’s McHaney, Thomas L. and David L. siecle to Modernist. University of North ⎯⎯ “On Faulkner’s Pleasant Life Among longtime friend, Sandra Baker. “What VanderMeulen, eds. Holograph facsimile Carolina Press, 1998. (XVIII, ii, 3) Snobs.“ An appreciation and tribute by lingers … is the graciousness of Mr. and transcription of Mosquitoes. Professor Foster on Faulkner’s “flight” and Mrs. Faulkner and the considerable “Nowhere, so far, is there quite so Tolson, Jay, ed. The Correspondence in 1957 to Charlottesville to be writer in interest Mr. Faulkner took in us young substantial an example of continuous of Shelby Foote & Walker Percy. Percy residence at the University of Virginia. people.” (XXI, i, 1,4) early handwritten draft writing of compares the younger Faulkner, “what a Interviews with Faulkner’s friends and Faulkner’s fiction.” Published by the poseur,” with the older’s “extraordinary colleagues fill out portrait of Faulkner Woodress, Fred A. “Two visits Recalled Bibliographical Society of the University fidelity and responsibility … supporting as private person, not opening his mail, With This ‘Outrageous, Interesting’ of Virginia and the UVA Library, 1998. that big family.” Foote recalls meeting enjoying fine bourbon, riding to hounds, Man.” Excerpted from commentary for (XVIII, ii, 1,4) Faulkner at Greenville, MS. Published by hosting parties at his home “Red Acres.” National Public Radio, airing March the Center for Documentary Studies with (XIX, iv, 1,3,4) 2, 2001; Woodress, former professor Meriwether, James. Japanese translation W.W. Norton, 1996. (XVII, ii, 4) of journalism at Ball State University, of Meriwether’s Essays, Speeches and Pratt, William. “Reed-Faulkner recalls meeting Faulkner at Rowan in Public Letters and Faulkner’s The “UPM to Publish Two Works About Friendship Remembered.” Pratt, nephew the 1940s as a soldier enrolled in the Wishing Tree, translated by Hajime Faulkner.” Announcing the October, of Faulkner’s longtime friend, pharmacist U.S. Army’s “STAR” classification unit Kijima, published by Fuzambo Publishing 1994, publication of Reading Faulkner: William McNeil (Mac) Reed, and professor at the University of Mississippi, paying Company in the Japanese language 27- Light in August, by Hugh Ruppersburg, of English at Miami University in Oxford, Faulkner two impromptu visits. (XXI, iii, volume Collected Works of Faulkner. and Faulkner and Psychology, eleven Ohio, reflects that the bond was personal, 3) (XVI, i, 4) papers read at 1991 Faulkner and not literary, though Faulkner often Yoknapatawpha Conference; edited by depended on Reed to wrap manuscripts “New Faulkner Journal from Japan.“ Donald M. Kartiganer and Ann J. Abadie. for mailing, and he inscribed nine books Essays by Kenzaburo Ohashi, M. Thomas (XIV, iii, 2) to Reed. Copy of Faulkner’s Sanctuary REPRODUCTIONS Inge, Kazuhiko Goto, Anne McKnight, inscription to Reed accompanies article. Ikuko Fujihira, Hans H. Skei and Ugo Watson, James G. William Faulkner: (XVI, i, 1, 3) Items in this section were often used as Regeo appear in the inaugural issue of Self-Presentation and Performance. illustrations and artwork, reproduced the Faulkner Journal published by the Watson cites “subtle allusions” that shed Strickland, William. “Déjà vu, Déjà Senti, from various sources including photo- Willliam Faulkner Society of Japan, Vol. “new light into hitherto dark corners of Déjà Goute.” Strickland, a family friend of copies of original letters or sketches. 1, April 1999. (XIX, iv, 3) the house of fiction Faulkner built and William Faulkner and professor emeritus Some of these documents and photos occupied.” University of Texas Press, and chairman of Modern Languages at were published in FN for the first time. “New Handbooks to Faulkner’s Novels 2000. (XXI, i, 2) the University of Mississippi, recalls Coming.” Light in August glossary, Hugh Faulkner giving him and his wife Photos Ruppersburg, ed.; inaugural volume of Yorifuji, Michio. The World of William Jeannette rootings from a rose bush from “Reading Faulkner” series, general editor Faulkner#Its Root. A study of the Rowan Oak and suggesting a southern “Col.” J.R. Cofield’s 1961 studio portrait Noel Polk. Identifies and comments on Mississippi towns of Holly Springs, New exposure would make transplanting of Faulkner wearing riding gear, black Jefferson and Yoknapatawpha County, Albany, Ripley and Oxford, on which successful. (XV, iv, 4) top hat and red hunt-jacket, and holding colloquialisms, dialects, customs and Faulkner drew for his “Jefferson.” riding crop; Faulkner sent a print of this sayings. University Press of Mississippi, Published in Tokyo by Seibido Publishing Wells, Dean Faulkner. “On the Ghosts picture to his publisher, inscribed “To 1994. (XIV, iv, 1) Company, 1997. (XVII, iv, 4) of Rowan Oak.” Wells, niece of William Random House. Love and Kisses. Tally Faulkner, recalls that she and her cousins Ho!” (XX, iv, 4) Ohashi, Kenzaburo. Faulkner: A Study. grew up at Rowan Oak believing in ghosts Separately published as three-volumes List of Reviewers “simply because all the grownups did.” “Col.” J.R. Cofield’s photograph of a in 1977, 1979, 1982, now combined in a The Faulkner children were fascinated seated Faulkner c. 1960 featured on 1997 1,278-page single volume which includes Boozer, William (XIV, iv, 1) by scary stories, book and movies. Their F & Y Conference poster. (XVII, iii, 2) a new Appendix of criticism and studies most anticipated holiday was Halloween, on Faulkner, revised and expanded Egerton, John (XIV, iv, 2) “which we celebrated with a pagan/ Ed Meek’s 1962 photograph of Faulkner Chronology, Bibliography and Index. Boozer, William (XV, iii, 4) Anglican fervor.” Reprint of article in The riding his horse “Stonewall Jackson” Published by Nan’un-Do Co., Ltd., of Boozer, William (XV, iv, 2) Oxford-American. (XVI, iv, 4) over a jump at Rowan Oak, reprinted in Tokyo, 1996. (XVI, iv, 4) Boozer, William (XVI, i, 4) Boozer, William (XVI, ii, 2, 4) PEN/Faulkner Awards poster designed Wells, Dean Faulkner and Lawrence by artist William Dunlap in 1993. (XX, i, Plimpton, George. Truman Capote: Boozer, William (XVII, ii, 1, 4) Shackelford, Dean. (XVIII, iii, 3) Wells. “Fond Memories of Murry (Jack) 3) In Which Various Friends, Enemies, Falkner by His Wife and Niece Mark Acquaintances, and Detractors Recall Boozer, William (XVIII, iii, 1, 2, 3, 4) Centennial of His Birth.” Interview with Faulkner family snapshots of Maud His Turbulent Career, an oral biography; Boozer, William (XIX, i, 2, 3) Inge, M. Thomas (XIX, iv, 2) Murry Falkner’s wife, Suzanne, on the Butler Falkner at her home in Oxford includes section on Faulkner’s influence th 100 anniversary of the birth of William’s with grandchildren, Jimmy, Jill, Chooky on Capote. Plimpton notes errors on Boozer, William (XX, i, 2) brother, “Jack” Falkner, WWI and WWII and Dean Faulkner; second photo of the authors’ tombstones. Death date on Williams, Joan (XX, ii, 2) veteran, FBI special agent and personal Maud with Dean Faulkner. From Dean Capote’s was one day off, while Faulkner’s Inge, M. Thomas (XXI, i, 2) Loyd, Dennis (XXI, ii, 2) pilot of J. Edgar Hoover. Five photos and Faulkner Wells collection. (XVII, iv, 3) tombstone in Oxford’s St. Peter’s painting of Falkner by his mother, Maud cemetery incorrectly uses apostrophe in Boozer, William (XXI, ii, 2) Butler Falkner. (XIX, ii, 1,3,4) Four Bern Keating photographs of the word “Belove’d.” Doubleday, 1997. Boozer, William (XXI, iv, 2, 4) Faulkner at the 1952 Delta Council (XVIII, ii, 2) Whitehead, James. “An Afternoon Visit Meeting in Cleveland, MS, appearing at Rowan Oak a Pleasant Memory 42 on the 1998 F & Y Conference poster, Reuss, Roland, and Peter Staengle, Years Later.” Novelist and University of printed at the University of Mississippi. translators. Faulkner’s essay, Arkansas professor Whitehead recalls (XVIII, iii, 1) “Mississippi,” which appeared in Holiday knocking on Faulkner’s door in the https://egrove.olemiss.edu/faulkner_nl/vol0/iss2/14 4 Wells: Index 2 (1994-2001)

Four photos of Murry C. (Jack) Falkner Pratt’s reminiscence about his uncle, Yocona River south of Oxford. (XIX, iii, his niece, Dean Faulkner, following the and his wife, Suzanne, published in FN pharmacist William McNeil (Mac) Reed’s 3) Nov. 10, 1935, death in a plane crash of on the 100th anniversary of the birth of friendship with Faulkner. (XVI, i, 3) her father, Dean Swift Falkner: an official William’s younger brother, WWI and William C. Odiorne snapshot of Faulkner “guardian’s oath,” a five-dollar check WWII veteran, FBI special arrest-agent Photo of Faulkner’s nephew, Jimmy sporting Vandyke beard in Paris in 1925, for guardian’s bond, a “Prayer” petition and personal pilot of J. Edgar Hoover. Faulkner, during F & Y Conference tour as reproduced on 1999 F & Y Conference allowing Dean’s mother, Louise Falkner (XIX, ii, 3) of New Albany and Ripley, with Catherine poster; inked in upper left corner Meadow, access to guardian’s funding. A. Duclos, widow of Donald P. Duclos, “Odiorne - Paris.” (XIX, iii, 1) (XX, iii, 1) Four photos of Faulkner in Paris, in April, author of Son of Sorrow: The Life, Works 1951, with Renee Gallimard of Editions and Influence of Colonel William C. Reproduction of Western Union telegram Gallimard, Faulkner’s French publisher, Faulkner, 1825-1889. (XVIII, ii, 3) Memorabilia from William Faulkner to wife Estelle and at St. Cloud with Else Jonson, widow Oldham Faulkner, believed to date from of Thorsten Jonsson, Swedish translator Photo of Faulkner with Japanese students Copy of inscription by Faulkner “To Mac last week in November, 1931, asking her of Faulkner at the publishing house of during his 1955 visit to Japan for the Reed from his friend, Bill Faulkner, with to take the train to New York to see him. Bonniers, Faulkner’s Swedish publisher. Nagano Seminar, the picture appearing gratitude and regards” in first edition of Faulkner’s return address is listed as th Courtesy of Monique Lange, press attache as frontispiece of Essays, Speeches Sanctuary, illustrating William Pratt’s “Algonquin Hotel, 44 St., City.” Telegram at Editions Gallimard. (XV, ii, 1) and Public Letters and The Wishing reminiscence about his uncle, pharmacist being offered for sale for $3,500 by Dad’s Tree, published by Fuzambo Publishing William McNeil (Mac) Reed’s friendship Old Book Store in Nashville. (XIX, iv, 1) George Barkley photo of Faulkner in Company in the Japanese language with Faulkner. (XVI, i, 1) horse riding costume and derby hat, Collected Works of Faulkner. (XVI, i, 4) Reproduction of William Faulkner’s blowing hunting horn in Virginia (c. Copy of inscription by Faulkner in a copy birth announcement card which Maud 1960?). (XIX, iv, 3) Photo of Faux Faulkner Contest judges of The Faulkner Reader owned by Mr. and Murry Falkner had printed: “William th John Berendt, Tom Wicker, George and Mrs. Alexander Rives and acquired C. Falkner/Born Sept. 25 , 1897./ New Jack Cofield’s studio photograph of Plimpton and Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., at by University of Mississippi Library Albany, Miss.” From the collection of Faulkner taken in Oxford, March 20, judging party at Elaine’s Restaurant in in 1994. Inscription reads: “To Mr. & Dean Faulkner Wells. (XIX, iii, 1) 1962, about three and a half months New York, April 1, 1996; second photo Mrs. Alexander Rivers/Roll Away Hills, before Faulkner’s death, appearing on F also with Dean Faulkner Wells, contest Va./19 Feb 1958/William Faulkner/and Artwork & Y Conference poster. (XX, iii, 3) coordinator, and Lynne Tolley, Jack Wedgewood, in memory of 2 splendid/ Daniel’s grand-niece; Cofield photo of days on him.” (XIV, iii, 2) Abstract painting of William Faulkner, set Marshall J. Smith photo of a pipe-smoking Faulkner in background. (XVI, iii, 1,3) against map of Yoknapatawpha County Faulkner in July, 1931. From William “Faulkner Centennial Exhibition: “A and Greek-columned mansion, by Grant Boozer collection. (XIX, iv, 1) Photo of Faulkner’s niece, Dean Faulkner 100.” Special Collections at Lund, professor of art at SE Missouri Faulkner Wells, with Meta Carpenter the University of Mississippi Library to State University, on display at SEMO’s Martin Dain’s photo of two gravediggers Wilde, author of A Loving Gentleman, publish a catalogue to accompany an Center for Faulkner Studies. (XVIII, ii, 1) taking turns preparing Faulkner’s grave, the 1976 memoir of Wilde’s 18-year love exhibition commemorating the Faulkner “Cadet Faulkner Depicts Pass Day.” Pencil one digging, one resting, taken July 7, affair with Faulkner beginning in 1932 in centennial, featuring 100 items drawn drawing by young Faulkner in Toronto in 1962 at St. Peter’s Cemetery in Oxford, Hollywood. (XV, i, 3) from printed and manuscript holdings 1918 on lined tablet paper depicts scene MS. From Special Collections, University not duplicated in other Faulkner on “pass day” in RAF’s cadet wing. From of Mississippi Libraries, Thomas Verich, Photo of Faulkner at “Roll Away Hills,” in collections, relating to the University, Louise Falkner Meadow collection. (XXI, Archivist. (XXI, iv, 2) Charlottesville, VA, riding a horse named the town of Oxford and Faulkner and i, 1) “Wedgewood,” part of Alexander Rives his family, including two rare letters Martin Dain photo of Faulkner with his collection acquired by University of from Faulkner’s great-grandfather, Caricature of Faulkner by Anthony horse, “P.G.T. Beauregard” at Rowan Mississippi Library in 1994. (XIV, iii, 2) Col. William Clark Falkner and several Thaxton, artist and teacher in Clinton, MS, Oak, to be reprinted on the poster of the previously unpublished Faulkner poems. showing Faulkner writing masterpieces 23rd annual Faulkner and Yoknapatawpha Photo of Faulkner taken in 1956 while he (XVII, iii, 4) on a computer, with the caption Conference at the University of was a patient at Memphis Baptist Hospital “There⎯an 1,800 word sentence!⎯Now, Mississippi. (XVI, iv, 1) by Dr. Richard C. Crowder, as it appeared Faulkner’s marriage license dated June how do I save it?” Appears on poster on a poster advertising the Faulkner 20, 1929, for his marriage to Estelle advertising a technology center in Martin Dain photo of Faulkner with his Festival at Rennes 2 University’s Villejean Oldham Franklin, signed by the author Ridgeland, MS, and depicting “what some horse “P.G.T. Beauregard” at Rowan campus, France, in 1994. (XV, ii, 3) on the “Applicant” line. (XV, i, 1) of the world’s great thinkers would have Oak; also photo of Oxford town square done with today’s technology.” (XVI, iv, in the early 1960s, as published in Photo of Faulkner at Rowan Oak, in work Faulkner’s 1938 signature in “Registered 3) Dain’s photo album, Faulkner’s World: shirt with pipe in hand, on the cover of Voters 1934-1955” ledger alongside that The Photographs of Martin J. Dain by the 1995 Mississippi Writers Calendar, of his mother, Maud Butler Falkner. Cartoon by Robert Ariail in The State, The Ole Miss Center for the Study of published by the Mississippi Department Discovered by newly elected Oxford Columbia, S.C., showing a Citadel Southern Culture and University Press of of Archives and History. (XV, i, 4) mayor Richard Howorth, during his first Cadet about to burn a stack of William Mississippi to coincide with Faulkner’s week on the job, on July 6, 2001, the 39th Faulkner’s books in protest of first female centennial celebrations, 1997. Photographs of Faulkner by “Col.” J.R. anniversary of Faulkner’s death. (XXI, iv, cadet Shannon Faulkner’s battle for Cofield and Martin Dain are reproduced on 1) acceptance at the school. Caption reads, Memphis Press Scimitar reporter posters by the University of Mississippi’s “Whoa! Wrong Faulkner!” (XV, iv, 4) Marshall J. Smith’s 1931 photos of Center for the Study of Southern Culture, Letter dated March 1, 1924 from Faulkner at Rowan Oak, after the marking the acquisition of photographic University of Mississippi Chancellor John “Faulkner Center Issues Print of John sensational debut of Sanctuary: 4 archives of the Cofield Studio in Oxford N. Powers’ to a state senator concerning Faulkner’s Painting, ‘.’” photos of Faulkner, 2 of Rowan Oak and and of photographer Martin J. Dain. (XV, university postmaster‘s independent Limited edition print of 100 copies of 1 of Oxford’s City hall. From the William iv, 1) status: “Mr. M.C. Falkner has a son who John Faulkner painting “Red Leaves,” Boozer collection. (XX, iv, 1) is Post Master here … appointed by the depicting Chief seated on Three jacket photos of Faulkner from Federal Government and … is in no his steamboat being pulled through river 1947 snapshot of Faulkner taken by Kitty the 1994 Modern Library editions of way related to the University save in bottom by Indians and slaves, issued by Reed from inside her father’s Gathright- the Snopes trilogy, Absalom, Absalom! the capacity of a Federal Government the Center for Faulkner Studies at SE Reed Drugstore. Faulkner stands on the and Selected Short Stories of William office.” (XVII, i, 1) Missouri State University in collaboration sidewalk, staring intently to his left, pipe Faulkner. (XV, i, 4) with M.C. “Chooky” Falkner, the artist’s in mouth, courthouse in the background. Nine inscriptions by Faulkner to Oxford son, who signed the 16x20” prints. (XXI, From “Mac” Reed Collection donated by Three photos by Philip Mullen, editor pharmacist, William McNeil (Mac) i, 4) Reed family to Miami University of Ohio. of The Oxford Eagle appearing in a F Reed, accompanying William Pratt’s (XVIII, i, 3) & Y conference exhibit, “Phil Mullen, reminiscence about his uncle Mac Reed’s “Faulkner the Artist.” Reproduction Oxford Photographer, 1949-1951”; only friendship with Faulkner. (XVI, i, 3) of William Faulkner’s drawing entitled Often published photo of Faulkner and known photo of brothers William and “Marietta,“ from his one-act play, The William McNeil (Mac) Reed at Gathright- John Faulkner together, actor Juano “On Faulkner’s Guardianship of Niece.” Marionettes, graces the front cover Reed Drugstore taken by Col. J.R. Cofield Hernandez during filming of “Intruder Reproductions of 3 documents signed by of Faulkner and the Artist, collected c. 1950. Photo accompanies William in the Dust,” and a study of the flooded Faulkner recording his guardianship of papers read at the 1993 Faulkner and

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Yoknapatawpha Conference at the “William Entertains Young Brother Penn to star and produce; to be directed University of Mississippi, published by Dean.” Two sketches which William by Jerzy Kromolowski; screenplay by NEWS EVENTS University Press of Mississippi. (XVI, iv, Faulkner drew and mailed to his 11-year- Kromolowski and his wife Mary Olson. 4) old brother Dean, while working at the Kromolowski decided to film in Oxford Note: Entries for the following news Winchester Repeating Arms Company and Lafayette County after scouting events are listed in chronological order Faulkner’s pen and ink sketch of Charlie in New Haven, CT, in 1918. One depicts locations there. (XVIII, ii, 1) for Volumes XIV iii - XXI iv. Chaplin, c. 1920s, from the collection of a football player with the notation Dean Faulkner Wells. (XX, ii, 3) “For Dean,” the other a street scene of Boozer, William. “Faulkner Statue to Mark Conferences an organ-grinder, entitled “The Hand His 1997 Centennial.” Report on Oxford Maud Butler Falkner painting of her son, Organ.” From the Dean Faulkner Wells Mayor John Leslie’s announcement of 21st Faulkner and Yoknapatawpha Murry C. (Jack) Falkner in his WWII army collection. (XIX, i, 1) plans for the commissioning of a life-size Conference report. “Gender is Topic for uniform, published for the first time in bronze statue of Faulkner by sculptor Annual Meet Set at Ole Miss,” July 31- FN in June, 1999, on the 100th anniversary “Work in Progress.” Report on sculptor William N. Beckwith to be erected in Aug. 5, 1994. (XIV, iii, 1) of Jack’s birth. (XIX, ii, 1) William N. Beckwith’s progress in creating front of city Hall on Oxford’s Courthouse a statue of Faulkner to be unveiled at the Square. (XVI, i, 1) Announcement of William Faulkner M. Thomas Inge’s 1958 sketch of Faulkner, 1997 centennial celebration in Oxford. Society meeting, held during the sixth originally published in The Yellow Clay model of a seated figure of Faulkner Lyric Theatre Movie Poster featuring the annual conference of the American Jacket Weekly Randolph-Macon College bolted to a steel bench, signature pipe in Oct. 11, 1949 “World Premiere - William Literature Association, in Baltimore. (XV, student paper along with an interview hand, slightly larger than life size. Photos Faulkner’s Intruder In the Dust.” i, 2) with Faulkner by Inge, then a student at of model, Beckwith, Faulkner’s physician, Original movie poster featuring a photo Randolph-Macon College. (XVIII, iii, 4) Dr. Chester McLarty, and Oxford mayor, of Oxford’s courthouse; from the exhibit 1995 Faulkner and Yoknapatawpha John Leslie. (XVII, iii, 1) catalogue of “A Faulkner 100: The Conference announcement: theme Painting of Henry Falkner, son of William Centennial Exhibition” in the Faulkner is “Faulkner in Cultural Context,” Clark Falkner, “the Old Colonel,” of collection at the University of Mississippi conference poster features John Ripley, MS, killed in 1878 by a jealous Library. (XVIII, iv, 1) McCrady’s 1939 painting, “Oxford on the husband; also a photo of Henry Falkner’s PLACES ASSOCIATED Hill.” (XV, iii, 3) grave, marked simply “Henry,” buried Photo of Oxford court square c. 1961 by next to his father in the Ripley Cemetery. WITH FAULKNER Martin Dain, from Faulkner’s World: The “Faulkner Centennial Celebrations.” Photo of Col. W.C. Falkner’s statue in Photographs of Martin J. Dain. In the Report on plans for celebrating Faulkner’s family plot at Ripley, facing “the ramparts Foreword, Oxford author Larry Brown Rowan Oak 100th birthday in 1997 including a of infinity,” p. 3. (XVI, ii, 1,3) comments on photographer Dain‘s work Faulkner Centennial in New Albany, MS, and preservation: “So much has gone, so “Log Barn Saved.” Report on restoration birthplace of Faulkner on Sept. 25, 1897. Portrait of William Faulkner by much has changed, so much has stayed of 1848 barn at Rowan Oak, with three Other planned conferences to include a Mississippi artist Marshall Bouldin III, the same.” Published by University Press photos showing barn in disrepair, being centennial in France and at the University depicting Faulkner sitting on table next of Mississippi, 1998. (XVIII, iii, 3) propped up, in the process of being of Mississippi’s annual Faulkner and to typewriter in his office at Rowan oak; disassembled, and the restored barn, Yoknapatawpha Conference. (XV, iv, 1) unveiled at Mississippi Hall of Fame at Report, with photo, of “Memory House,” its original logs having been fortified, Jackson, MS, by author’s nephew, Jimmy built in 1847 in Oxford, former home preserved and numbered for reassembly. “1996 Conference: ‘Natural World’ To Be Faulkner, in June, 1994. (XIV, iv, 1) of Dolly and John Faulkner, William’s (XV, iii, 1) Theme of 23rd Event.” Announcement brother, undergoing 1995 renovation of forthcoming 1996 Faulkner and Poster of 21st Faulkner and by its new owner, the University of “Rowan Oak Gets Funding of $500,000.” Yoknapatawpha Conference at the Yoknapatawpha conference featuring Mississippi Foundation. (XV, ii, 4) Report on state funding bill passed by the University of Mississippi, featuring an oil painting entitled “Political Rally,“ Mississippi legislature, sponsored by Sen. lectures and readings by Thomas by Mississippi artist John McCrady, Gray Tollison of Oxford, allocating a half College Hill McHaney, Lawrence Buell, Myra Jehlen, depicting Theodore G. Bilbo addressing million dollars for the preservation and Diane Roberts, Louise Westling, A. a gathering on Oxford’s Court Square. renovation of Rowan Oak., designated a “Yoknapatawpha, Images and voices.” Walton Litz and Jay Watson. (XVI, ii, 1) (XIV, iii, 3) National Historic Landmark and National Photograph of interior of College Hill Literary Landmark. (XVIII, iii, 2) Presbyterian Church, built in 1845 in “23rd Faulkner Conference Highlights.” Reproduction of painting of Faulkner the College Hill community four miles Report on 1996 Faulkner and children and their nanny, “Mammy “Rowan Oak Society: $5 Million northwest of Oxford, by George G. Yoknapatawpha Conference at the Callie,” c. 1908, by Maud Butler Falkner, Preservation Fund Announced.” A Stewart, from his portfolio entitled University of Mississippi, to feature a mother of William Faulkner; the painting Rowan Oak Society led by fund-raisers Yoknapatawpha, Images and Voices. reading by William Kennedy, Pulitzer- and other artwork by Maud Falkner on Campbell McCool and Susan Barksdale Map of Yoknapatawpha County in prize-winning author of Ironweed and exhibit during the Faulkner centennial Howorth announce plans to raise $5 Absalom, Absalom! indicates Thomas The Flaming Corsage. New tour added of 1997 at the University of Mississippi’s million to preserve the 156-year-old home Sutpen’s marriage to Ellen Coldfield was to program, a day-long excursion to Skipwith Museum; still life of fruit basket; of Faulkner, Rowan Oak, now owned by at “College Church.” (XXI, iv, 3) Columbus, MS, along with optional portrait of granddaughter Dean Faulkner. the University of Mississippi: $3 million tours of Oxford, New Albany and Ripley, (XVII, iv, 1, 3) endowment, generating $150,000 for New Albany Holly Springs, the , or annual upkeep; the rest for repairs and Pontotoc. (XVI, iii, 1,2) Sketch of Faulkner by Chigusa Ando work on Bailey’s Woods surrounding the appearing on cover of the inaugural issue Watercolor by artist Katherine Dye of property. (XX, iv, 1,2) “Celebrations: 1997 Marks Faulkner of the Faulkner Journal published by the the New Albany, MS, house in which Centennial.” William Boozer reports William Faulkner Society of Japan, Vol. 1, Faulkner was born. The house no longer on upcoming celebrations of the 100th April 1999. (XIX, iv, 3) Oxford, Lafayette County stands. From the exhibit catalogue anniversary of Faulkner’s birth in the of “A Faulkner 100: The Centennial Watercolor painting “Rowan Oak #1” by “A Note of Thanks For Phil Stone And Exhibition,” the painting part of the town of New Albany, MS, Faulkner’s Darrell W. Berry, of Little Rock, receives Friend.” Reproduction of holograph Faulkner collection at the University of birthplace, Oxford and the University th top award in Watercolor USA 1999 in letter of March 7, 1922, from poet Edwin Mississippi Library. (XVIII, iv, 1) of Mississippi, during the 24 Faulkner showing at Springfield Art Museum in Arlington Robinson to Faulkner’s friend and Yoknapatawpha Conference, whose Springfield, MO. The study of second and mentor Phil Stone, in Oxford, Paris theme is “Faulkner at 100: Retrospect floor landing at top of stairs at Rowan thanking Stone for sending him a and Prospects.” Other events announced Oak to be published in a limited edition Swinburne poem. At the time, Stone was at Rennes 2 University in France, the set of signed color prints. (XIX, iv, 3) “Faulkner Lived and Wrote Here during University of Delaware in Newark, and loaning Faulkner books by Swinburne His 1925 Paris Visit.” Five photos by and other poets and novelists. From the Faulkner House Books in New Orleans. William Faulkner sketch of a Ole Miss retired Faulkner family physician, (XVII, i, 1, 3) coed wearing a shawl from the May 1925 William Boozer collection. (XIX, I, 4) Dr. Chester McLarty, of the Left Bank Scream, Ole Miss humor magazine; from neighborhood in Paris where Faulkner “F & Y Celebrates Faulkner at 100, And the exhibit catalogue of “A Faulkner 100: “As I Lay Dying to be Filmed In, Near resided at 26 rue Servandoni, a side The Centennial Exhibition,” published Oxford.” Report on plans for film Outlook.” Faulkner and Yoknapatawpha street between the church of St. Sulpice th by the University of Mississippi Library. Conference on the 100 anniversary adaptation of Faulkner’s As I Lay Dying and the Luxembourg Gardens. (XX, ii, 1) (XVIII, iv, 1) by Sean Penn and Phoenix Pictures, of Faulkner’s birth, featuring Jimmy Faulkner, Meg Faulkner DuChaine, https://egrove.olemiss.edu/faulkner_nl/vol0/iss2/16 6 Wells: Index 2 (1994-2001)

Andre Bleikasten, Thadious M. Davis, “Two Panels on Faulkner at ALA Meet.” include “The Achievement of William Faulkner Contest, beginning with the Joseph L. Fant, Judith Sensibar, Lothar William Faulkner Society issues call for Faulkner,” hosted by M. Thomas Inge at 1996 contest; announcement being made Honnighausen, Arthur Kinney, Thomas papers for contributors to two panels, Randolph-Macon College; “Faulkner and at the Faulkner and Yoknapatawpha McHaney, David Minter, Albert Murray “Faulkner and the Book” and “Faulkner, Modernism” symposium at the University Conference at the University of and Hans Skei; with dramatic and musical Speech and Identity,” at the American of Nottingham, at Nottingham, England; Mississippi. (XV, iv, 1) presentations based on Faulkner’s works. Literature Association conference, May “The Faulkner Centennial: A Visual Arts (XVII, iii, 1,2) 25-28, 2000, in Long Beach, CA. (XX, i, Exhibition” co-sponsored by the Center “Guterson Wins PEN/Faulkner.” Report 4) for Faulkner Studies at SE Missouri State on David Guterson as 1995 PEN/Faulkner “Centennial Salute at U. of Michigan.” University; centenary observances at aware winner for his 1994 novel, Snow Reporting two-day conference at “Faulkner in New Century is Theme for Tbilisi State University in the Republic of Falling on Cedars. Judges are Charles the University of Michigan’s Special 27th Meet.” Announcement of 27th annual Georgia, Peking University in Beijing, and Johnson, William Kittredge and Lee Collections Library featuring an exhibit F & Y conference at the University of the Gorky Institute of World Literature in Smith. (XVI, i, 4) (Sept 25 -Nov 22, 1997) of the Faulkner Mississippi, theme to be “Faulkner in the Moscow. (XVII, ii, 1,3) collection of Irwin T. and Shirley 21st Century” and featuring lectures and “Faux Faulkner Judging Party at Elaine’s.” Holtzman displaying first and variant discussions “exploring possible changes “Faulkner Centennial.” Reporting more Announcement of planned judging party editions, photos, drawings, screenplays, in the way we read Faulkner, new issues symposiums and conferences in honor at Elaine’s Restaurant in New York, celebrating the 100th anniversary of … and new contexts.” Documentary film of Faulkner’s 100th birthday at the judges to include George Plimpton, Faulkner’s birth. (XVII, iv, 1) on southern history, 1915-1940 by Ross University of Ca’Foscari, Venice, Italy, Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., Tom Wicker and Spears, “Tell About the South,” to be which will focus on problems of language John Berendt. Co-hostesses for the April “These Japanese Events Marked shown. (XX, ii, 1,3) and style, and problems of translation; at 1, 1996, event are Dean Faulkner Wells, Faulkner at 100.” Report on the 95th the College of Staten Island, featuring an Faulkner’s niece and coordinator of the Kinokuniya Seminar, Dec. 7, 1997, “Panel on Faulkner and Sexuality Planned exhibit of the Faulkner Collection of Dr. Faux Faulkner Contest, and Lynne Tolley in Tokyo, celebrating the Faulkner for MLA.” Call for papers for special Karl J. Leone and speaker Edmund Volpe, of Lynchburg, Tenn., Jack Daniel’s great- Centennial, hosted by Professor Takaki session on Faulkner at Modern Language former president of the college; at the grand-niece. (XVI, ii, 1) Hiraishi of the University of Tokyo. Association meeting, Washington, SCMLA conference in Dallas sponsored Lectures by Professor Emeritus of DC, December, 2000. Suggests that by the William Faulkner Society. (XVII, “Absaloon, Absaloon! Wins 1996 Faux American Literature Kenzaburo Ohashi, panelists “explore applications of recent iii, 1,2) Faulkner for Lance Martin.” Martin, a literary critic Kojin Karatani and novelist scholarship in sexuality to Faulkner’s New Orleans attorney, takes first prize Hideki Ikezawa. Also, the Faulkner texts, the cultural construction of desire.” “Focus on Faulkner Again Scheduled with parody about a “Spotted Horse Centennial honored in Japan in an issue (XX, ii, 3) at New Albany.” Reporting two days of Casino” in Jefferson, Mississippi. Semi- of Bungaku-kukan (Literary Space), “Focus on Faulkner” sessions as part of finalists included Robert F. James, IV:2, 1998, “Dissemination/Faulkner,” Boozer, William. “Faulknerians to the Tallahatchie RiverFest: A Celebration “Sanctuary, sanctuary very much,” and six articles and photos pertaining to Examine New Dimensions in Faulkner.” of the Arts, September 24-25, 1998, at Joseph Zaitchik, “Faulkner Answers His Faulkner. (XVIII, ii, 4) Additional preview of 27th F & Y New Albany, MS, birthplace of William Critics.” The parodies appear on pp 2,4. Conference includes assessment of Faulkner. Speakers include Robert (XVI, iii, 1,2,4) “’Faulkner, America” is Theme.” Faulkner scholarship and readership “like Hamblin, Lisa C. Hickman, Eva Miller Announcing 25th annual F & Y Conference none we’ve seen since Shakespeare.” As and Rebecca Jernigan. (XVIII, iii, 4) “ Wins PEN/Faulkner Award at the University of Mississippi, which Larry Levinger writes in “The Prophet and Pulitzer Prize.” Ford was awarded is to address the “complex connection Faulkner” in The Atlantic Monthly (June, “Faulkner’s Major Years,” two-day the PEN/Faulkner award May 18 at of how Faulkner and his work ‘fit’ into 2000), “Toward what betterment can his seminar, October, 2000, sponsored by the ceremonies at the Folger Shakespeare the various American literary, political ferocious imagination tempt us…?” (XX, William Faulkner Foundation at Rennes Library in Washington for his 1995 novel and historical traditions.” Also featuring iii, 3) 2 University in France, includes panels Independence Day (Knopf), which also narrative theater presentation by on , Go Down, Moses and If garnered the Pulitzer Prize. (XVI, iii, 4) actresses Alice Berry and Jenny Odle of “Faulkner and War.” Call for papers, 28th I Forget Thee, Jerusalem, with speakers “Twenty Will Not Come Again,” based annual F & Y Conference, University of Peter Lurie, Michael Zeitlin, Noel Polk “Paris Review to publish “Absaloon, on Joan Williams’ essay tracing her Mississippi, exploring the role that war and Francois Pitavy. (XXI, ii, 2) Absaloon!” At Elaine’s Restaurant judging relationship with Faulkner. (XVIII, iii, 1, played in the life and work of “a writer party, George Plimpton, founding editor 3) whose career seems forever poised of The Paris Review, announces plans against a backdrop of wars ….” (XXI, i, Awards and Contests to publish Lance Martin’s winning Faux “Postmodernism Theme of 26th Annual 2) Faulkner parody. (XVI, iii, 4) th Meet.” Announcing 26 F & Y Conference 1994 American Way Faux Faulkner winner at the University of Mississippi, whose Seminars and announced. Samuel Tumey, an attorney “Richard Ford Wins PEN/Faulkner Award theme will be “Faulkner and Post- and Pulitzer Prize.” Ford was awarded Symposiums in Liberty, MS, wins with “Quentin and Modernism.” The challenge of situating Shreve on Football.” Runners-up are the PEN/Faulkner award May 18 at Faulkner in the context of what has John Ruemmler and Wendy Goldberg. ceremonies at the Folger Shakespeare been termed postmodern is “one of the “Recontres’ William Faulkner.” Library in Washington for his 1995 novel Announcement of symposium on All three of their parodies are reprinted. trickiest in current literary theory.” (XIX, (XIV, iii, 1) Independence Day (Knopf), which also i, 1) Sanctuary Dec. 1-2, 1996, at the William garnered the Pulitzer Prize. (XVI, iii, 4) Faulkner Foundation at Rennes 2 “Roth Wins PEN/Faulkner.” Report on “Faulkner Society Participants.” Photo University in France, to include screenings “Wendy Goldberg Wins 8th Annual Faux of the films “A Story of Temple Drake” Philip Roth’s 1993 novel, Operation of professors Kenzaburo Ohashi, Ikuko Shylock, having been named winner Faulkner.” Reprints of top three parodies; Fujihira and Kyoichi Harakawa attending and “Sanctuary,” poster containing photo Goldberg, who teaches writing and of pipe-smoking Faulkner. (XVI, i, 2) of the 1994 PEN/Faulkner Award for the first conference of the William Fiction. (XIV, iii, 2) critical thinking at Stanford University, Faulkner Society of Japan, in October wins with “Dyin’ to Lie Down,” first 1998, where the special guest lecturer “Polk to Conduct 1997 Workshop on female winner of the Faux Faulkner Faulkner’s Novels Under NEH Grant.” 1995 Faux Faulkner winner, Peter was Dr. James B. Meriwether, speaking Stoicheff, who previously won in Contest. Runners-up are Michael Crivello on “” as a prologue to the Reporting on a five-week workshop at and Walter Watkins, Jr. Judges present at the University of Southern Mississippi 1993, takes first prize for “A Rose for Snopes trilogy. Meriwether also donated Hemingway.” The first runner-up is judging party held at Elaine’s Restaurant 2,000 books to the society collection. conducted for the seventh year by Noel include Roy Blount, Jr., George Plimpton, Polk, professor of English at USM; the Michael Crivello’s “Strike in August”; (XIX, i, 4) second runner-up goes to Wendy Rose Marie Morse and Cathie Pelletier. first four weeks of study to be held in (XVII, iii, 1) Hattiesburg, with the fifth and final week Goldberg for “As I Lie Daily (To My “Criticism, Politics of Difference to be Analyst, Analyst)!” These three parodies Panel Topics at SSSL Meet.” Call for at the University of Mississippi’s Faulkner “Berriault Stories win PEN/Faulkner and Yoknapatawpha Conference. (XVII, are reprinted with the announcement. papers on the relationship between (XV, iii, 1) Award.” Gina Berriault’s collection of 35 Faulkner’s work and the changing cultural i, 3) short stories, Women in Their Beds, is context of “the politics of difference” for “Write-alike Contest Has New Sponsor.” winner of 1997 PEN/Faulkner Award for the Society for the Study of Southern “Faulkner Celebrations Underway, Fiction. The collection also was awarded Planned.” The 1997 symposiums and Announcement that Jack Daniels Literature Conference, April 6-9, 2000, to Distillery is to replace American Way the year’s National Book Critics Circle be held in Orlando, Fla. (XIX, iv, 4) conferences celebrating the 100th award. (XVIII, i, 2) anniversary of Faulkner’s birth to Magazine, of American Airlines, as the new corporate sponsor for the Faux

Published by eGrove, 2019 77 Faulkner Newsletter and Yoknapatawpha Review, Vol. 0 [2019], No. 2, Art. 1

“Robert L. Blake Jr. Takes Top Honors short story, “Turn About,” filmed in 1932 Duvall, Howard, Jr., Oxford businessman with ‘Pile On’.” A physician-teacher at the as “,” priced at $4,500. and friend of the Faulkner family, founder CHECKLIST University of Missouri School of Medicine (XVI, ii, 4) of Yoknapatawpha Press, dead at 64. (XIV iii - XXI iv) in Columbia, MO, Robert L. Blake, Jr., Lawrence Wells, Duvall’s business partner is the winner of the 1998 Jack Daniels “None Could Say It Better.” Faulkner is at Yoknapatawpha Press, reminisces Faux Faulkner contest with a parody of joined by Hemingway, Poe, Steinbeck, about Duvall‘s devotion to Oxford and The Checklist is an annotated a football “first down” entitled “Pile On.” Hawthorne and Eliot in a collectible his respect for its literary tradition begun bibliography of Faulkner-related Contest judges include George Plimpton, birthday greeting card whose message by Faulkner. (XVII, ii, 3, 4) materials published in sources other John Berendt, Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., and reads simply “Happy Birthday.” The front than The Faulkner Newsletter, including Barry Hannah. Runners-up are previous of each card bears an actual canceled Foster, Ruel E., Benedum Professor critical or biographical books or winners, Samuel M. Tumey and Wendy postage stamps with the author’s likeness. of American Literature emeritus at articles, feature magazine or newspaper Goldberg. (XVIII, iii, 1,2,4) (XVII, i, 3) West Virginia University and co-author articles, news items and works of fiction mentioning William Faulkner or in with Harry Campbell of first book- which a fictional character is based on “Samuel Tumey Repeats With Best “Go Down, Moses Among Choice length study of Faulkner and his work, Faulkner. Parody.” The 1999 Faux Faulkner Contest Faulkner Titles Sold at Recent Auctions.” William Faulkner: A Critical Appraisal, These articles and books, published in is won by previous winner, Samuel M. Nineteen lots of Faulkner titles auctioned published in 1951, dead at 82. (XX, ii, 4) the United States and abroad, from June Tumey, of Liberty, MS, who will read his at Christie’s in New York, including 1994 to December 2001, were recorded parody “Where the Southern Crosses the limited edition of Go Down, Moses with Harrington, Evans, professor emeritus of and annotated in FN Volumes XIV iii - Dog” at the F & Y Conference in July, 1999. a catalogued price of $4,000-6,000. (XVII, English at the University of Mississippi, XXI iv. They are listed alphabetically by Includes parodies of runners-up Wendy ii, 4) dead at 72, remembered by Barry authors’ last names or titles (when no Goldberg’s “Soundbites and Furies,” and Hannah, Ole Miss writer in residence as author or editor’s name was available). This bibliography is not all-inclusive Sue E. Herring’s “The Readers.” (XIX, iii, “Ole Miss Special collections Honored “enthusiastic without all the academic but represents those Faulkner materials 1,3,4) Faulkner With Centennial Exhibition.“ claptrap. I don’t know of a better reader, brought to the attention of the FN staff. Among 1997 observances of the literary man, and uncommon gentleman.” In each entry a brief description of “Hemispheres New Sponsor of Write- Faulkner centennial, notable was the The Evans Harrington Creative Writing contents is given when the title is not alike Competition.” Announcement exhibit “A Faulkner 100: The Centennial Scholarship Fund established to award fully explanatory, along with volume of new corporate sponsor for Faux Exhibition” from the Faulkner collection $1,000 a year to promising young writers number, issue and page (e.g., XIV, iii, 1) Faulkner Contest, Hemispheres, in-flight at the University of Mississippi Library; at Ole Miss. (XVIII, i, 1,2) where the annotation appeared in FN. magazine, United Airlines; inaugural organized by university archivist, Thomas advertisement reads: “You reach for the M. Verich, who edited the catalogue by Summers, Bessie, friend of Faulkner, died Amerikastudien / American Studies, Vol. fountain pen that you bought last winter the same title. (XVIII, iv, 1) at 98. A 1919 graduate of the University 42, No. 4 (1997). Lothar Honnighausen, guest from Flem Snopes# as he lay dying.” (XX, of Mississippi, she regularly participated editor. William Faulkner: German Responses i, 1,4) “Center Receives Haynes Gift.” Jane in panel discussions during the F & Y 1997. Essays in English on Germany’s Isbell Haynes, formerly of Memphis Conference (“Oxford Women Remember reception of Faulkner. “Austrians, Germans “Delta Doom: Fun with Fast Food Fries and Collierville, TN, donates substantial Faulkner”). (XVII, iii, 2) and Swiss think of Hemingway rather than Wins Faux Faulkner.” Catherine Dupree, portion of her Faulkner collection to Faulkner, unaware of how far Hemingway’s of Los Angeles, wins 11th Faux Faulkner the Center for Faulkner Studies at SE Wilde, Meta Carpenter, author of A ‘stakes’ have gone down while those of the Contest with “Delta Drive-Thru,” with Missouri State University. Haynes is Loving Gentleman, dead at 86. Dean Mississippian keep soaring.” Published by greasy french fries that are “no longer a the author of two genealogical studies, Faulkner Wells recalls having met Meta Universitatsverlag C. Winter, 1997. (XIX, i, 1) fry but clumps of cellulite and folds of fat William Faulkner: His Lafayette County Wilde, whose memoirs detailed her affair Blotner, Joseph. Robert Penn Warren: A and dimpled wobbly flab.” Runners-up Heritage and William Faulkner: His with Faulkner beginning at MGM in Biography. Numerous references to Faulkner are Mitchel Globe’s “Verbose in Tertio,” Tippah County Heritage. (XIX, i, 4) 1932 when Faulkner was a studio writer and to Warren’s work in Faulkner studies and Allan Kolsky’s “William Faulkner working under . Wilde and criticism, especially Warren’s review of Recites the Pledge of Allegiance.” (XX, “Beer Broadside Brings $1,725 at Swann was Hawks’ secretary and, later, a script Malcolm Cowley’s Portable Faulkner as a iii, 1,2,4) Auction.” Faulkner’s “Beer Broadside” supervisor. (XV, i, 3) factor in renewed interest in Faulkner’s work. which he wrote and distributed in Random House, 1997. (XVII, ii, 1) “Ha Jin’s Waiting Wins 20th PEN/ support of legalized beer sales in Oxford Faulkner.” Ha Jin, professor of English [referendum roundly defeated in 1950 Blotner, Joseph L. and Frederick L. Gwynn, eds. Faulkner in the University. Introduction at Emory University who left his native election] leads sales of nine Faulkner by Douglas Day, who was a graduate student China in 1985, has won the 2000 Pen/ items at Swann Galleries auction, June at the University of Virginia when Faulkner Faulkner Award for Fiction. Jin’s novel 10, 1999, in New York. (XIX, iv, 2) was writer in residence, 1957-58. Record of Waiting was chosen by judges Andrea Faulkner’s sessions with students. University Barrett, Nicholas Delbanco and Reginald “Faulkner Fetches Premium Prices Press of Virginia, 1995. (XV, iv, 2) Knight out of 250 novels and short story at Swann Auction.” Virgil C. Lutes collections. (XX, iii, 4) Collection of 20th Century literature Blount, Roy, Jr., “Gone Off Up North,” Oxford was sold at Swann Galleries, November, American (November-December, 1999). “Allan Kolsky Wins 2001 Competition.” 2000, including 54 lots of Faulkner Columnist Blount parodies Faulkner’s stream- of-consciousness technique in a fictional Kolsky, runner-up in 2000 Faux Faulkner titles, which sold for a total of $133,978. “barefooted tennis game” in Hollywood Contest, wins in 2001 with “The (Auto) Highest valued Faulkner title was a first between Faulkner and Zasu Pitts vs. Clark Pound and the Jury - Or - Quentin Gets edition Soldier’s Pay, bought by a dealer Gable and Dorothy Parker, whom a drunk His First Parking Ticket.” Runners-up for $32,200. (XXI, ii, 4) Faulkner mistakes for Margaret Mitchell. are Catherine Dupree, “Count Re-Count,” (XX, i, 1) and Christine Smith, “Fathersearch.com.” “Faulkner Prices At Two June Swann (XXI, iii, 1,3,4) Auctions.” First edition The Sound and Bockting, Ineke. Character and Personality the Fury is sold at Swann’s Galleries for in the Novels of William Faulkner: A Study “Roth’s Human Stain Wins PEN/Faulkner $9,775; limited edition of , one of in Psychostylistics. Focuses “on the ’people’ that Faulkner created in his four major Award for Fiction.” Winner of the 2001 299 numbered and signed copies fetches psychological novels,” The Sound and the PEN/Faulkner Award is Philip Roth’s $2,530; also 24 other Faulkner titles sales Fury, As I Lay Dying, Light in August th th novel, The Human Stain (Houghton- recorded at sale of 19 and 20 Century and Absalom, Absalom! University Press of Mifflin), the conclusion of Roth’s trilogy Literature. (XXI, iv, 2) America, 1995. (XVI, iv, 1) about postwar American lives, selected from among 275 entries. (XXI, iv, 2) Brown, SJ, Joseph A. “A Cheer for the Weary Traveler: Toni Morrison, William Faulkner, OBITUARY NOTICES and History.” The Mississippi Quarterly, Vol. XLIX, No. 4 (Fall 1996), pp. 709-726. Essay Auctions and Collections Brooks, Cleanth, Gray Professor in special issue on “History and the African- Emeritus of Rhetoric at Yale University American Voice,” Donna H. Winchell, guest “Dealer Prices in AB Bookman’s Weekly.” and Faulkner scholar, author of The Well editor. Father Brown contrasts the tragic Reports on current offerings of Faulkner Wrought Urn and William Faulkner: The view of history in Absalom, Absalom! with collectibles and rare book dealers, such Yoknapatawpha Country; died May 10, the reverent one in Song of Solomon. (XVIII, i, 4) as Faulkner-signed MGM contract for his 1994, at 87. (XIV, iii, 4) https://egrove.olemiss.edu/faulkner_nl/vol0/iss2/18 8 Wells: Index 2 (1994-2001)

Burleson, Al. “Light in Oxford: Faulkner county. Cohn arrives at night when “It was so Oxford American, Issue No. 18 (1997). Ten of Sexuality. Essays by Lisa Rado, Minrose C. to Grisham, literature thrives here.” The quiet I could hear the electricity hum in the thirty-nine letters written by Faulkner during Gwin, Meryl Altman, Amy Lovell Strong, Huntsville Times, March 17, 1996, H1. power lines.” Surprised at lack of memorials the 1940s and ‘50s to his wife, their daughter, Evelyn J. Schreiber, Amy Louise Wood, Neil Burleson reports on John Grisham, Barry to Faulkner, interviews owner, and other family members, are published Watson, Cathy Peppers, Doreen Fowler, Jay Hannah, Larry Brown, Willie Morris and other Richard Howorth, and Faulkner’s physician, here, four for the first time. OA’s 18th issue Watson, and Susan Donaldson. Edited and writers who lived in Oxford. (XVI, iii, 1,2) Dr. Chester McLarty. (XV, iv, 1) celebrates Faulkner centennial with essays distributed at University of Akron. (XVI, ii, 2) and articles on Faulkner by Padgett Powell, Campbell, Will D. And Also With You: Duncan Dardis, Tom. Firebrand: The Life of Horace Donald Kartiganer, Diane Roberts, Randall Faulkner Journal. XI: 1&2 (Fall 1995/Spring Gray and the American Dilemma. Part Liveright. Dardis, professor emeritus at John Curb, Bern Keating and Marc Smirnoff. 1996; published Winter 1996). Special Issue: biography, part history, tribute to Duncan Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York, (XVIII, i, 4) A Latin American Faulkner. Beatriz Vegh, M. Gray, Jr., rector of St. Peter’s Church in reports at length on Liveright’s publication of University of Uruguay, Montevideo, guest Oxford and steadying presence during the Faulkner, beginning with Soldier’s Pay, and ⎯⎯ “Kentucky: May: Saturday.” Sports editor. Sixteen essays, articles, reviews and riot over James Meredith’s enrollment, later how Liveright “changed forever the methods Illustrated, May 9, 1994, 55-56, 58. Reprint of interviews, editorial chart of Faulkner’s works to become Episcopal Bishop of Mississippi. by which books could be marketed” in the Faulkner’s report on 1955 Kentucky Derby translated into Spanish, “to map Faulkner’s Gray performed wedding ceremony for U.S. Random House, 1995. (XVI, i, 2) won by “Swaps” over the favored “Nashua,” powerful presence in Latin American Faulkner’s niece, Dean, and officiated at in 40th anniversary issue of SI. (XIV, iv, 4) literature through three generations of Faulkner‘s private funeral service at Rowan Dirda, Michael. “Excursions: A visit to Mr. readers and writers.” (XVII, ii, 1) Oak. Providence House Publishers, 1997. Jefferson’s university features a treasure-trove ⎯⎯ Mosquitoes. Introduction by Frederick (XVIII, ii, 1) of manuscripts.” The Washington Post Book R. Karl: “Out of him poured … the novels Faulkner Journal, Vol. XII: 1, Fall 1996. World, July 28, 2000. University of Virginia’s that established him as heir to European Thesesa M. Towner, guest editor. Essays by Chapius, Bernard, “Faulkner: Ecrivain, Ivrogne Alderman Library displays one of Faulkner’s Modernism and as America’s greatest Harriet Hustis, Katherine Henninger, Arthur et Gentleman.” Vogue Hommes, July 1995. tweed jackets, his seventh-grade report card, fiction writer since Henry James. New York: A. VanderVeen, Phillip Novak and Paul Luis Profile of Faulkner in French-language Vogue “Mostly As and Bs,” and rare manuscript Liveright, 1997. (XVIII, ii, 2) Calkins. Published by the University of accompanied by eight photographs of the of . “I reverently Akron in affiliation with the William Faulkner author, one of Faulkner’s great-grandfather, touched a page,” Dirda writes. (XX, iv, 1,2) ⎯⎯ “Rose of Lebanon.” The Oxford- Society. (XVIII, ii, 2) William Clark Falkner, a Memphis street American, May-June 1995. Billled as scene, and drawing by Faulkner from 1920-21 Egerton, John. Speak Now Against the Day: “Faulkner’s last great short story” by the Faulkner Journal, Vol. XIV, No. 1 (Fall Ole Miss yearbook. (XVI, i, 2) The Generation Before the Civil Rights magazine, “Rose of Lebanon” is a story of Civil 1998). Michael Zeitlin, guest editor. Essays Movement in the South. Numerous references War-era romance and of Southern courage by Jacquelyn S. Lynch, Thomas Carmichael, Chappel, Charles. “Lawrence Wells of Oxford: to Faulkner in this major study of the era; and endurance. In a letter OA Editor Marc Kelly L. Reams, Marie H. Lienard, Jay Watson An Interview,” Mississippi Quarterly, includes 1931 photo of Faulkner with Milton Smirnoff writes of visiting the site of Rose of and Merrill Horton. (XIX, iii, 1) Vol. XLVIII, No. 2 (Spring 1995). Wells, co- Abernethy, owner of the Intimate Bookshop Lebanon, a vanished community near Potts publisher with wife Dean Faulkner Wells of in Chapel Hill. Alfred A. Knopf, 1994. (XV, i, Camp, Miss., which Faulkner may have used Faulkner Journal, Vol. XIV, No. 2 (Spring 1999). The Faulkner Newsletter, discusses his two 1) for the title. (XV, iii, 1-2) Michael Zeitlin, guest editor. Contributors novels, Rommel and the Rebel (1986) and include Robert D. Parker, Charmaine Eddy, Let the Band Play Dixie (1989) published by Eigo Seinen, Vol. 143, No. 8 (November 1997). ⎯⎯ Selected Short Stories. Thirteen stories Kevin Railey, Patrick McHugh and Richard Doubleday and Co., and Oxford and comments Special Faulkner Centennial issue of a leading including “Turnabout,” “Honor” and “Two Godden. (XX, iii, 2) on Oxford and Faulkner. (XVI, i, 2) magazine in Japan on the study of English and Soldiers.” The Modern Library, 1993. (XV, i, American literature and language. 16 essays 1-2) Faulkner Journal, Vol. XV, Nos. 1 & 2 (Fall ⎯⎯ Detective Dupin Reads William on Faulkner, contributors include Kenzaburo 1999/Spring 2000). Susan V. Donaldson, guest Faulkner: Solutions to Six Yoknapatawpha Ohashi, Naoto Sugiyama, Hisao Tanaka and ⎯⎯ Snopes: The Hamlet, The Town, The editor. Devoted to “Faulkner and Masculinity,” Mysteries. Chappell, professor of English Youchiro Miyamoto. (XVIII, ii, 2) Mansion. Introduction by George Garrett, contributors include Sandra Guttman, Walter at Hendrix College in Conway, AR, writes inviting the reader to consider Faulkner‘s Wenska, D. Matthew Ramsey, Thomas Loebel, a novel as a means of teaching Faulkner. A “Faulkner Made Easy,” uncredited Dixie Living own views on the Snopes trilogy in Selected Harriet Hustis, David Rogers, Caroline Miles, trio of fictional sleuths tackle such “cases” as feature article, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Letters of William Faulkner. The Modern John N. Duvall and Carlos L. Dews. (XX, ii, “The Furtive Memphis Lawyer in Sanctuary” July 31, 1994, offering “a primer of things you Library, 1994. (XV, i, 2) 2,3) and “’s Suicide Site in The really ought to know about (Faulkner) and Sound and the Fury.” International Scholars his work.” (XIV, iv, 1-4) ⎯⎯“’’ and Other Stories,” Faulkner Journal, Vol. XVI, No. 3 (Fall 2000/ Publications, Bethesda, MD, 1997. (XVIII, i, selected and read by Wendell Berry. Includes Spring 2001). Susan V. Donaldson and Michael 4) Faulkner, John. Dollar Cotton. Re-issue of stories “The Old People” and “Shingles for the Zeitlin, guest editors. Special issue, addendum second novel by William Faulkner’s brother, Lord.” Three hours length, recorded by Audio to 16.1&2, “Faulkner and Film.” Contributors Charlton, James, editor. Fighting Words: John, “about hard work and dreams, about the Literature, 1994. (XIV, iv, 4) are Noel Polk, Beth Widmaier, Krister Friday, Writers Lambast Other Writers – From triumph and failure of man, and endurance Bradley A. Johnson, Donald M. Kartiganer Aristotle to Anne Rice. Includes comments on the land.” Originally published 1942 by ⎯⎯ Soldiers’ Pay. Introduction by Frederick and Linda S. Hargreaves. (XXI, ii, 3) by Faulkner on Mark Twain, Henry James, Harcourt Brace, reprinted by Yoknapatawpha R. Karl: “there is no denying that the idea Hemingway and himself. Algonquin Books, Press in 1975. Hill Street Press, 2000. (XX, iii, of a returning soldier, silenced, dying, the Faulkner Studies, Vol. 2, No. 1 (April 1994). 1994. (XIV, iv, 1) 1,2) center of attraction, helped shape Faulkner’s Michel Gresset, Kenzaburo Ohashi, Kiyoyuki imagination.” New York: Liveright, 1997. Ono and Noel Polk, editors. Containing Cherry, Wynn. “William Faulkner and Lillian ⎯⎯ Men Working. Foreword by Trent Watts. (XVIII, ii, 2) essays by Michael Zeitlin, Takako Tanaka and Smith: Two Distinct Journeys.” The Southern First published in 1941 by Harcourt, Brace, Yoshio Hasegawa. Published by Yamaguchi Quarterly, Vol. 35, No. 4 (Summer 1997). the novel is a satire on the New Deal’s Works ⎯⎯ The Reivers, book cassette read by Publishing House in Kyoto, Japan. (XIV, iii, 1) Lillian Smith Centennial Issue. On Smith’s Progress Administration in Mississippi which Dick Hill, seven hours in length, recorded by frustration over Faulkner’s “mythic mind,” “examines the cultural dissonances, humor Brilliance Corp., 1994. (XIV, iv, 4) Fayen, Tanya T. In Search of the Latin calling him “the great finger painter.” (XVIII, and horrors that befall uprooted agrarian American Faulkner. A “comprehensive ii, 1) people.” University of Georgia Press, 1996. ⎯⎯ “Tomorrow.” Reprint of the short story analysis of Faulkner’s presence in Spanish- (XVI, iv, 1) in Francis Ford Coppola’s Zoetrope: All- speaking Latin America from the 1930s to Chiba Review, Kiyoyuki Ono, ed. No. Story, Vol. 3, No. 4 (Winter 1999), pp. 47-53. the 1980s,” draws on critical commentary by 18, William Faulkner Special Issue, 1996. Faulkner, William. Absalom, Absalom! The Appearing in “Classic Reprint” series, takes Latin American writers Vargas Llosa, Borges, Contributions include critical articles by Corrected Text. Printing follows the text as note of the 1972 Robert Duvall film based on Onetti and Donoso. University Press of Edwin T. Arnold, Judith Lockyer, Chris corrected in 1986 under the direction of Noel the story. (XX, i, 1) America, 1995. (XVI, iv, 2) LaLonde; reviews by Toshio Koyama, James Polk. The Modern Library, 1993. (XV, i, 1) Ferguson and Shigeru Hanaoka. Published ⎯⎯ “Wash.” The Oxford Book of the Fiemeyer, Isabelle. “La malediction du Sud: by the Chiba English Literary Society, Chiba ⎯⎯ “Christmas Tree.” With a note by Patricia American South, Edward L. Ayers and Pleins feux sur l’oevre et la vie de William University, Chiba City, Japan. (XVII, i, 1) C. Willis. The Yale Review, Vol. 83, No. 1 (Jan. Bradley Mittendorf, eds. Faulkner story Faulkner.” Lire, May 1995. French-language 1995). Published for the first time, the short “Wash” collected among works by 57 Southern article includes remembrance of Faulkner by Cohn, Deborah N. History and Memory story “was written probably about 1921,” writers, including Welty, Penn Warren, Agee, his niece, Dean Faulkner Wells. (XVI, i, 2) in the Two Souths: Recent Southern and holograph and typescript in the holdings Ellison, Styron, Willie Morris, Peter Taylor, Spanish American Fiction. Study of Rosario of the Rosenbach Museum and Library in Zora Neale Hurston. Oxford University Press, Fowler, Doreen. Faulkner: The Return of the Ferre, Carlos Fuentes, Gabriel Garcia Philadelphia. In Faulkner’s handwriting is a 1997. (XVII, ii, 1,2) Repressed. Drawing on Jacques Lacan and Marquez, Mario Vargas Llosa, among others, trial title, “Whoopee.” (XVI, iv, 1, 2) other theorists, Professor Fowler employs in which “debts to Faulkner are frequently Faulkner Journal, Vol. VIII, No. 1 (Fall, 1992). a feminist psychoanalytic methodology in acknowledged” for “encapsulating not just ⎯⎯ Go Down, Moses. Introduction by Stanley Noel Polk, guest editor. With esssays by Noel assessing symbolic meanings of race and the South’s past but the Spanish Americans’ Crouch. Newest Faulkner title in redesigned Polk, Neil R. McMillen, James G. Watson, Hee gender in selected Faulkner novels. University own as well.” Vanderbilt University Press, series of Faulkner’s novels by Random House Kang, Janet Wondra and Andrew Scoblionko. Press of Virginia, 1997. (XVIII, iv, 1, 4) 1999. (XX, iii, 1) for the Modern Library’s 75th anniversary. The (XIV, iv, 1) Modern Library, 1995. (XVI, iv, 2) Glissant, Edouard. Faulkner, Mississippi. Cohn, Nik. “Slim Pickings,” The London Faulkner Journal, Vol. IX, Nos. 1 & 2 (Fall Reappraisal of Faulkner by Caribbean writer Times, Travel Section, Nov. 13, 1994, pp 1, ⎯⎯ “The Homesick Letters of William 1993/Spring 1994). Susan V. Donaldson, Glissant, overview of Yoknapatawpha novels 2. Report of a visit to Oxford and Lafayette Faulkner.” Introduced by M. Thomas Inge. The guest editor. Special Issue on Faulkner and and other Faulkner work, examines question

Published by eGrove, 2019 99 Faulkner Newsletter and Yoknapatawpha Review, Vol. 0 [2019], No. 2, Art. 1 of Faulkner and race. Translated from the Hamblin, Robert W. “No Such Thing As Was”: ⎯⎯ William Faulkner: The Contemporary Conference by Doreen Fowler, Anne G. Jones, French by Barbara Lewis and Thomas C. William Faulkner and Southern History. An Reviews. Reviews and excerpts of reviews of Deborah Clarke, Carolyn Porter, Jay Martin, Spear. Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1996. (XIX, address at the 1994 Southern Literary Festival. Faulkner’s work from 1925 to 1962. Sources Jay Watson, Lee Jenkins, Michael Zeitlin, John iv, 1) Published by the Center for Faulkner Studies, include existing bibliographies, Random T. Irwin, David Wyatt and Donald Kartiganer. SE Missouri State University, 16 pages. (XV, House files and other files by institutions University Press of Mississippi, 1994. (XV, i, Glossbrenner, Alfred and Emily Glossbrenner. i, 2) and individuals. Cambridge University Press, 2) About the Author. Reader’s guide to literary 1995. (XV, iii, 2) masterpieces; Faulkner listing includes Harmon, Melissa Burdick. “William Faulkner: ⎯⎯ Faulkner and Ideology. Thirteen papers biographical notes, recommended reading The Sound and the Fury of a Self-Destructive ⎯⎯ Perspectives on American Culture: read at the 1992 Faulkner and Yoknapatawpha list and websites and a suggestion that The Life” and “Exploring Faulkner’s Mississippi.” Essays on Humor, Literature, and the Conference at the University of Mississippi. Sound and the Fury is the best of Faulkner’s Biography Magazine, June 2000. Faulkner Popular Arts. Collection of 18 essays including University Press of Mississippi, 1995. (XV, iv, books to read first. Cader Books, Harvest “understood, as few people have ever “Yoknapatawpha on the Don: Faulkner and 2) Original, Harcourt, 2000. (XXI, i, 1) understood … the fierce dramas that drive Sholokhov.” Locust Hill Press, 1994. (XV, i, 2) everyday lives.” Accompany travel feature on ⎯⎯ Faulkner and the Artist. Collected Godden, Richard. Fictions of Labor: William Rowan Oak. (XXI, i, 1,3) Inoue, Masaru. “Honeysuckle, My Caddy.” papers read at the 20th annual Faulkner Faulkner and the South’s Long Revolution. Oxford Town , The Oxford Eagle, June 15-20, and Yoknapatawpha Conference in 1993. Godden, professor of English at the University Hightower, Sheree, Cathie Stanga and Carol 2000 Professor Inoue, who teaches American Contrigutors include Barry Hannah, Joel of Kent, Canterbury, England, offers a textual Cox, eds. Mississippi Observed. Photos of Literature at Ferris University in Yokohama, Williamson, Joseph Blotner, Michel Gresset, examination of Absalom, Absalom! and other Mississippi authors from the Mississippi recalls sabbatical in Oxford where the native Susan V. Donaldson, Panthea Reid, Thomas novels to explore Faulkner’s “social trauma” Department of Archives and History, with honeysuckle and wistaria inspired in him an S. Hines, Wesley Morris, Martin Kreiswirth, of slavery. Cambridge University Press, 1997. selections from their works; Faulkner is appreciation for Faulkner’s depiction of “the Michael Zeitlin, Candace Waid, Michael (XX, i, 1,2) one of 36 writers represented in the volume. relationship between human beings and their Lahey, Robert w. Hamblin and Thomas University Press of Mississippi, 1994. (XV, i, American earth.” XX, iv, 2,3) Rankin. University Press of Mississippi, 1996. Gray, Richard. The Life of William Faulkner: 2) (XVI, iv, 2) A Critical Biography. Gray, professor of ⎯⎯ “I see a wind, I hear a sunlight.” In tribute English at the University of Essex, calls Hines, Thomas S. William Faulkner and both to Faulkner and to Willie Morris, Inoue ⎯⎯ Faulkner and Gender. Papers read his attempt to explain Faulkner’s fiction in the Tangible Past: The Architecture of writes of his trips to Oxford beginning in 1984 at the 21st Faulkner and Yoknapatawpha relation to his life and times as a “work in Yoknapatawpha. Hines, professor of History and of a lasting friendship with Morris that Conference at the University of Mississippi progress, a contribution to a commentary and of Architecture at UCLA, examines impact started with their naming Oxford’s Holiday in 1994. Contributors include Doreen Fowler, that is theoretically endless.” Includes 23 of the “built environment” on Faulkner’s Inn bar “The Prince Albert Lounge.” (XX, iv, Noel Polk, John N. Duvall, Robert D. parker, photographs, family trees and chronology. consciousness. Over 100 color and b-w 3) David Rogers, Minrose C. Gwin, James Blackwell Publishers, 1994. (XV, iii, 2) photos, maps and drawings of architecture of Polchin, Michael E. Lahey, Andrea Dimino, Oxford, MS, and surrounding area. University Irwin, John T. Doubling and Incest / Patricia Yaeger, Deborah Clarke, Joseph R. Greenberg, Paul. “Two Different Men, of California Press, 1997. (XVII, ii, 2) Repetition and Revenge: A Speculative Urgo and Philip M. Weinstein. (XVII, ii, 2) Same Southern Dream.” Richmond Times- Reading of Faulkner. Expanded edition of Dispatch, Jan. 15, 2001. Lessons of courage in Hinkle, James C. and Robert McCoy, eds. Irwin’s acclaimed critical work on Faulkner, ⎯⎯ Faulkner in Cultural Context. Papers Nobel Prize speeches of Faulkner and Martin Reading Faulkner: . first published in 1975, contains two essays read at the 1995 Faulkner and Yoknapatawpha Luther King, Jr. Where King talked “about Series general editor, Noel Polk. Glossary by Irwin written in the 1990s, “Knight’s Conference at the University of Mississippi. children and the time to come,” Faulkner and Commentary by the editors. McCoy and Gambit: Poe, Faulkner, and the Tradition of The theme “encapsulates the changes of the seemed to be writing about “a time that was Polk add a tribute to the late James Hinkle, the Detective Story” and “Horace Benbow last decade in the way we read Faulkner past,” and yet “the past isn’t dead, it isn’t even founding editor of the Reading Faulkner and the Myth of Narcissa.” Johns Hopkins [in] the various contexts that surround [the past.” (XXI, ii, 3) series. University Press of Mississippi, 1995. University Press, 1996. (XVI, iii, 2) texts]⎯the historical, political, economical, (XV, iv, 2,3) social, ideological and aesthetic conditions.” Gresset, Michel, ed. Etudes Faulkneriennes: James, Rosemary, editor. The Double Dealer University Press of Mississippi, 1997. (XVIII, Sanctuary, Vol. I. Collection of 17 papers given Honnighausen, Lothar. Faulkner: Masks Redux, Vol. 2, No. 1 (Fall 1994), reviews and iv, 1) at the “Journees d’etude” held at the William and Metaphors. Authorial role-playing is essays including “William Faulkner’s Pylon,” Faulkner Foundation in Rennes in Dec., the theme of this examination of the “masks by W. Kenneth Holditch, and “Faulkner: The ⎯⎯ Faulkner and the Natural World. Papers 1995. Gresset writes that Sanctuary despite and metaphors” of Faulkner’s personae and Great Questioner,” by Noel Polk. Published read at 1996 F & Y Conference by William its “succes de scandale” carved a “space of imagery. University Press of Mississippi, 1997. by the Pirate’s Alley Faulkner Society. (XV, i, Kennedy, Lawrence Buell, Thomas McHaney, its own in our literary university⎯like, say, (XIX, i, 1, 2) 1) Theresa Towner, Jay Watson, Diane Roberts, Madame Bovary.” Presses Universitaires de among others. University Press of Mississippi, Rennes, 1996. (XVIII, ii, 2) Hood, Orley. “Oxford’s diamond of square Jarvis, Christina. “’Like a lady I et’: Faulkner, 1999. (XIX, iv, 1) takes top honors.” The Clarion-Ledger, Food and Femininity.” The Southern Grimshaw, James A., Jr., ed. Cleanth Brooks Jackson, MS, June 5, 1996, 3B. Columnist Quarterly, Winter 1999. Explores Faulkner’s Kerr, Robert. “Rowan Oak Dilemma: ‘What’s and Robert Penn Warren: A Literary Orley Hood interviews Oxford’s Richard depictions of food and eating in Sanctuary destroyed in preserving the Faulkner legend?’” Correspondence. Ten references to Faulkner, Howorth, Dean Faulkner Wells and Larry as “mechanisms of social control” for The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Dec. 30, including Brooks’ letter praising Warren’s Wells about the town of Oxford winning the “reinscribing and reinterpreting cultural 1994. Kerr interviews curator Cynthia Shearer, essay, “Faulkner: The South, the Negro and Clarion-Ledger’s “Best Courthouse Square in gender and racial norms.” Published by the who talks about balancing expectations of Time.” University of Missouri Press, 1998. Mississippi” contest. (XVI, iv, 2) University of Southern Mississippi. (XIX, iii, visitors with the need for preservation. Color (XIX, iii, 1) 2) and b/w photos. (XV, iii, 2) Inge, M. Thomas. “Faulkner’s Enduring Gurwitt, Rob. “Light in Oxford.” Mother Jones, ‘Dixie Limited.’” Cosmos 2000, Journal of Jie, Tao. Ed. Faulkner: Achievement and Kinney, Arthur F. Go Down, Moses: the May/June 2000. Reports on revitalization the Cosmos club of Washington, D.C., Vol. 10. Endurance. 19 papers by scholars and writers Miscegenation of Time. Kinney examines of Oxford’s courthouse square as “the heart Abbreviated version of Inge’s essay previously at International Faulkner Symposium at Faulkner’s use of the saga of the McCaslin of Faulkner’s Mississippi” and yet, with published in China and Japan. On Faulkner’s Peking University in Beijing, November 1997, family “to study the sociological, psychological developers buying up property and building impact on writing, Faulkner as a “writer’s commemorating the Faulkner centennial; and economic forces of Southern history that condominiums in Oxford, “It is possible to get writer” and “an unavoidable presence in his includes Faulkner’s Nobel Prize speech, with are at once its claims to grandeur and to quite gloomy about all of this.” (XXI, i, 1) own time and after.” (XXI, ii, 3) a biography of Faulkner and “The Faulkner defeat.” Twayne Publishers, 1996. (XVI, iv, 2, 100 Bookshelf,” both by M. Thomas Inge. 3) Gussow, Mel. “More Than Enduring, Faulkner ⎯⎯ “The Faulkner Bookshelf.” American (XIX, iii, 2) Prevails.” The New York Times, Sept. 25, Studies International, Vol. XXXV, No. 3 Kinney, Arthur F., editor. Critical Essays 1997. Gussow’s centennial tribute to Faulkner (October 1997). Out of 500 books on Faulkner Jones, Diane Brown. A Reader’s Guide to the on William Faulkner: The Sutpen Family. observes, “Faulkner became a myth maker and 700 doctoral dissertations, Inge selects “the Short Stories of William Faulkner. Examines Newest in “Family series” edited by Professor who could differentiate between facts and 100 essential books … that would constitute 31 of the 42 stories in Faulkner’s Collected Arthur Kinney, collects 36 contributions truth. Facts, he said, can be looked at from a basic bookshelf of Faulkner scholarship.” Stories. G.K. Hall & Co., 1994. (XIV, iv, 4) by writers and scholars including Cleanth different angles, but the truth is unassailable.” Categories: Biography, Bibliography and Brooks, Malcolm Cowley, Bernard DeVoto, (XVIII, ii, 2) Reference, Primary Documents, memoirs and Kartiganer, Donald. “Oh, I know who you are. Thadious M. Davis, John T. Irwin, Elisabeth Criticism. (XVIII, ii, 2) You’re William Faulkner. You look just like Muhlenfeld, Hershel Parker, Andre Bleikasten Hahn, Stephen and Arthur F. Kinney, eds. your pictures.” Oxford American, November- and Linda Wagner-Martin. G.K. Hall, 1996. Approaches to Teaching Faulkner’s The Inge, M. Thomas, ed. Conversations with December, 1999. Review of Conversations (XVI, iv, 2) Sound and the Fury. Collected essays in the William Faulkner. Literary Conversations With William Faulkner, M. Thomas Inge, Approaches to Teaching World Literature series, Peggy W. Prenshaw, general editor. ed., reprises Faulkner’s famous comment Kolmerten, Carol A., Stephen M. Ross and series, Joseph Gibaldi, series editor, examining Forty previously uncollected interviews and to woman in New York: “I am not William Judith B. Wittenberg, eds. Unflinching Gaze: “Faulkner’s treatment of subjectivity and reports of meetings with Faulkner, providing Faulkner. But I have been told before that I Morrison and Faulkner Re-Envisioned. language as he portrays characters like Benjy “a vivid picture of Faulkner in all his genuine look like him.” (XX, i, 2) Collection of critical essays exploring “the … Faulkner’s engagement with the particular wit, and … perverse cantankerousness.” resonant intertextual relationship between the history and culture of the South in relation University Press of Mississippi, 1999. (XIX, Kartiganer, Donald M. and Ann J. Abadie, fiction of William Faulkner and Toni Morrison to that of the nation.” Modern Language iv, 1) eds. Faulkner and Psychology. Papers read … although separated by a generation as well Association, 1996. (XVII, i, 1) at the 1991 Faulkner and Yoknapatawpha as by differences of race, gender and regional https://egrove.olemiss.edu/faulkner_nl/vol0/iss2/110 10 Wells: Index 2 (1994-2001) origin.” University Press of Mississippi, 1997. degrees of political power” available to the Encyclopedia. Published at Mississippi State Ono, Kiyoyuki. Railroad in American (XVIII, i, 4) racial identities of the three authors. Duke University. (XXI, iv, 1) Literature. Examines themes of railroading in University Press, 1999. (XX, iv, 3) works of 23 American authors dating back to Kopley, Richard, ed. Prospects for the Mississippi Quarterly, Vol. XLVII, No. 3 the “Concord school” and including a chapter Study of American Literature: A Guide Millgate, Michael. Faulkner’s Place. Eight (Summer 1994). Special William Faulkner on Faulkner’s “Snopes trilogy” and Dreiser’s for Scholars and Students. Sixteen essays essays by Millgate, Professor of English at the Issue. Donald M. Kartiganer, guest editor. “Desire trilogy.” Kenkyusha Publishing, Ltd., on American writers, including Thomas L. University of Toronto. “Backward and past- Essays and reviews by Michael Williams, 1999. (XIX, iii, 2) McHaney’s chapter on Faulkner: “Whatever obsessed … Yoknapatawpha, even northern Renee R. Curry, Robert Merrill, Diana York critical fashion does with Faulkner’s work, Mississippi, could not remain motionless and Blaine, Andrew J. Wilson, Nancy E. Batty, Pettus, Gary. “At Home with Pappy: Faulkner his prospects among those struggling in his unchanging … something Faulkner came Richard Golden, James M. Mellard, Anne fan, friend and faux wins contest.” The craft remain excellent.” New York University to understand very clearly.“ University of Goodwyn Jones and David Minter. Published Clarion-Ledger, Jackson, MS, Southern Style Press, 1997. (XVIII, ii, 2) Georgia Press, 1997. (XIX, i, 2) at Mississippi State University. (XV, ii, 1) section, Sept. 7, 1994, 1D, 5D. Mississippian Samuel Tumey wins1994 Faux Faulkner Kreyling, Christine. “Notes From Faulkner Minter, David. William Faulkner: His Life Mississippi Quarterly, vol. XLVIII, No. 3 contest; companion article “Oxford’s Country: The town square revisited.” and Work. Reissued 1980 biography with new (Summer 1995). William Faulkner special Yoknapatawpha Press keeps the Faulkner Nashville Scene, Aug. 17, 2000. Writing of the preface by Minter: “Like Yeats … Faulkner issue, Minrose C. Gwin, guest editor. Essays Flame burning” on the 1994 publication of courthouse evoked by Faulkner in Requieum was driven and enriched by the courtesies by Arthur A. Brown, Judith B. Wittenberg, The Faulkner Newsletter: Collected Issues. for a Nun, Kreyling, architecture and urban and … customs … as well as the betrayals Joseph Urgo, James M. Mellard, David (XV, iii, 2) planning editor for Scene, notes that the town’s and madnesses of the region that he … knew Newman and Louise Westling; annotated appearance is changing despite Faulkner’s best.“ Johns Hopkins University Press, 1997. bibliography “Faulkner and Gender” by Cheryl Polk, Noel. “’How the negros [sic] became hopes that progress would fail to erode the (XVIII, ii, 4) Minnick; reviews by Philip Weinstein, James McCaslins too.’: A New Faulkner Letter.” town’s architectural integrity. (XX, iv, 3) B. Carothers and John N. Duvall. Published at Southern Cultures, Vol. 5, No. 3 (Fall 1999). “Mississippi Mud.” Oct. 9, 1932, J. Donald Mississippi State University. (XVI, i, 2) Published by the University of North Carolina Ladd, Barbara. Nationalism and the Color Adams’ review of Light in August, reprinted Press for the Center for the Study of the Line in George W. Cable, Mark Twain, in special centennial issue of New York Times Mississippi Quarterly. Vol. XLIX, No. 3 American South. Faulkner’s letter to Mary and William Faulkner. Three years after Book Review, Oct. 6, 1996. Adams: “Light in (Summer 1996). Special William Faulkner Frances Wiley, replying to her questions Pudd’nhead Wilson was published, Faulkner August is a powerful novel, a book which issue. James M. Mellard, guest editor. Fifteen about the ledgers in The Bear, “to set a tone was born “into a south alienated from the rest secures Mr. Faulkner’s place in the very front essays, notes and reviews. Erik Bledsoe … but they also told a story, of how the negros of the nation, impoverished, defensive and rank of American writers of fiction.” (XVII, i, introduces a review of Soldier’s Pay by became McCaslins” through miscegenation. provincial.” Like Cable and Twain, Faulkner 2) Margaret Mitchell in the Atlanta Journal, (XX, i, 2,3) confronted “white racist paranoia” at a March 26, 1926, accompanied by pen and ink time when “cultural isolation was no longer Mississippi Quarterly, Vol. XLV, Supplement drawing of Faulkner by William Spratling, Polk, Noel. Children of the Dark House: Text convincing.“ Louisiana State University Press, for 1992 (1994), edited by Jerry T. Williams. whose New Orleans apartment Faulkner was and Context in Faulkner. Selected criticism 1997. (XVIII, ii, 3) “A Checklist of Scholarship on Southern then sharing. Published at Mississippi State by Polk, professor of English at the University Literature for 1991,” including notes on 120 University. (XVII, ii, 2) of Southern Mississippi, editor of the definitive LaLonde, Christopher A. William Faulkner books, essays and articles about Faulkner. texts of Faulkner‘s works, and Eudora and the Rites of Passsage. LaLonde, associate Published by Mississippi State University. Mohrt, Michael, editor. Album William Welty‘s bibliographer, on “the simultaneous professor of English at North Carolina (XIV, iii, 1) Faulkner. Iconographic selection and discovery of curious triangulations between Wesleyan College, traces the “evolution of commentary by Mohrt accompanies 318 Faulkner’s life, his works, and the works of rites of passage as narrative strategy and as a Mississippi Quarterly, Vol. XLVI, 1993 photographs of Faulkner, family members, Freud.” University Press of Mississippi, 1996. thematic concern” in Faulkner’s early fiction. Supplement, published 1995. Checklist of Oxford and Mississippi scenes pertaining to (XVI, iv, 3) Mercer University Press, 1996. (XVI, ii, 2) Scholarship on Southern Literature for 1992. Faulkner’s work, the South and social issues. Listings of 62 books, essays and articles Editions Gallimard, 1995. (XV, iii, 1) Pousner, Howard, “Ready or Not, Faulkner’s Levinger, Larry. “The Prophet Faulkner.” published in 1992 pertaining to Faulkner. hometown draws ‘in’ crowd.” Atlanta Journal- The Atlantic Monthly, June 2000. Levinger, Compiled by the Society for the Study of Moser, Thomas C. “Faulkner’s Muse: Constitution, April 27, 1994. Pousner visits former contributing editor of Geo, notes that Southern Literature, Virginia Commonwealth Speculations on the Genesis of The Sound Faulkner haunts in Oxford, MS. (XIV, iii, 1) shift in critical opinion makes Sanctuary University. Published at Mississippi State and the Fury,” appearing in Critical read today “like realism rather than Southern University. (XV, iii, 2) Reconstructions: The Relationship of Fiction Premoli-Droulers, Francesca. Writers’ Houses. gothic – placing it among Faulkner‘s greatest and Life, edited by Robert M. Polemus and Photographs by Erica Lennard, prologue by works.” (XX, iii, 3) Mississippi Quarterly. Vol. XLVIII, 1994, Roger B. Henkle, Stanford University Press, Marguerite Duras. Faulkner’s Rowan Oak published 1996. Jerry T. Williams, Checklist 1994. (XIV, iii, 1) one of twenty-one homes of literary giants, Literary Calvacade, Vol. 50, No. 2 (October editor. W. Edwin Ellis, Technical editor. featuring 10 color photographs of interior and 1997). “A Light in August,” excerpt from the “Checklist of Scholarship on Southern Nosek, Janet. My Mother is a Fish: A grounds. Vendome Press, 1995. (XVI, i, 4) novel; “His Name was Pete,” Faulkner’s letter Literature for 1993.” Supplement, contains Commonplace Reader of William Faulkner’s to The Oxford Eagle, Aug. 15, 1946; “Dyin’ to 106 entries about Faulkner. Published at Fiction. Professor Nosak, of the University Pucheck, Peter. “Faulkner’s Light in August: Lie Down,” Wendy Goldberg’s winning parody Mississippi State University. (XVII, i, 2) of Alaska at Anchorage, offers personal Epiphany, Eternity and Time.” The Southern in 1997 Faux Faulkner contest. (XVIII, ii, 3,4) commentaries on selected passages from Quarterly, Vol. XXXVI, No. 1 (Fall 1997). Mississippi Quarterly, Vol. L, No. 3 (Summer Faulkner to demonstrate patterns of “high Published by the University of Southern Little, Robert Ashford, as told to T.E. 1997). Special William Faulkner issue, Philip diction, repeated aphorisms, uncertain Mississippi. (XVIII, ii, 4) Simmons. “Growing Up with Mr. Faulkner.” G. Cohen, guest editor. Contributors include metaphysical outlook, the characters that Oxford American, May/June 2001. Little, Sharon L. Allen, Rebecca Keane-Temple, reappear in different novels.” Introduction Rader, Dotson. “Be Open to Whatever whose parents, Dr. and Mrs. Ashford Hunter Sean Benson, Denise Tanyol, Evelyn J. by Robert West. International Scholars Happens.“ Parade magazine (May 18, 1997) Little, were friends of Faulkner from the late Schreiber and Frances L. Nichol. Published at Publications, 2000. (XX, iv, 3,4) interview with Lauren Bacall, who knew 1920s, recounts sailing in Faulkner’s sailboat, Mississippi State University. (XIX, i, 2) Faulkner in Hollywood: “He was a shy, kind the Ring Dove, and launching the houseboat, O’Briant, Don. “Faulkner might not recognize of tortured, sweet, fascinating man.” Faulkner the Minmagary, at nearby Sardis Reservoir. Mississippi Quarterly, Vol. LI, No. 3 (Summer Oxford.” Nashville Tennessean, G1, 3, July sent Bacall a copy of his Nobel acceptance (XXI, iii, 1,2) 1998). Special William Faulkner issue. Thomas 16, 2000. Travel piece reports on transition of speech, inscribed, “To Lauren Bacall, who L. McHaney, guest editor. Contributions by W. Oxford from sleepy community with literary was not satisfied with just being a pretty face, Mandal, Somdatta, editor. William Faulkner: Kenneth Holditch, Linda Holland-Toll, Sean heritage to a “trendy urban center for music, but rather who decided to prevail.” (XVIII, i, A Centennial Tribute. Foreword by Donald Latham, Gary Storhoff, Laura L. Bush, Vincent art, restaurants and shops.” (XXI, i, 3) 1) M. Kartiganer. Mandal, Professor of English at A. King, Marilyn C. Ford, Pia Masiero, William Vivekananda College, University of Calcutta, Meyer, Jr., and Heather O’Donnell. Published Ono, Kiyoyuki, “‘The Good Splendid Railey, Kevin. Natural Aristocracy: History, collects 24 essays by international scholars at Mississippi State University. (XIX, iii, 2) Things Which Change Must Destroy’: An Ideology, and the Production of William assessing Faulkner’s legacy. New Delhi: Interpretation of ‘.’” Chiba Faulkner. Argues that Faulkner “emerged Prestige Books, 1999. (XIX, i, 2) Mississippi Quarterly, Vol. LII, No. 3 Review, No. 17 (1995). Ono, professor of from an intense attachment to a paternalist (Summer 1999). William Faulkner Special American Literature at Chiba University, in ideology into [a] bourgeois environment” Maurer, David A. “Longtime Friendship Issue, Thomas L. McHaney, guest editor. Chiba, Japan, and editor in chief of the Chiba which “encourages us to see Faulkner’s career Developed Through Sound and Fury.” The Contributors include Bart Welling, George Review, interprets “life is motion” theme of as an intellectual and historical drama.” Daily Progress, Charlottesville, VA, Jan. 23, Handley, John Lutz, Barbara Ladd and David- Faulkner short story. (XVI, i, 2) University of Alabama Press, 1999. (XX, ii, 2) 2000. Maurer interviews new resident Joan Everett Blythe. Published at Mississippi State Williams, on her friendship with Faulkner University. (XX, ii, 1) Ono, Kiyoyuki. “Faulkner’s Concept of Reading Faulkner: The Sound and the Fury. beginning in 1949. “He was very interested in courage.” Chiba Review, 19/20, Chiba English Glossary and commentary by Stephen M. writing a novel about him and me.” (XX, ii, 1) Mississippi Quarterly, Vol. LIII, No. 4 (Fall Literary Society, 1998. On Faulkner’s concept Ross and Noel Polk. The Sound and the Fury 2000). Special William Faulkner issue. Thomas of courage: “True courage lies not in the “has been a sort of litmus test for critical McKee, Patricia. Producing American Races: L. McHaney, guest editor. Contributors are appearance, but in the spirit of those who approaches to literature, from New Criticism Henry James, William Faulkner, Toni Ed Pavlic, Kathleen Moore, Marc Hewson, perform it.” Published at Chiba University. to biography and manuscript analysis.” Morrison. Through close readings of selected Maryanne M. Gobble and Bart Welling, (XIX, i, 2) University Press of Mississippi, 1996. (XVII, novels of James, Faulkner and Morris, reviews by Noel Polk of the Pleiade Faulkner i, 2) McKee explores “the different forms and and Thomas McHaney of The Faulkner

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Rowe, John Carlos. At Emerson’s Tomb: The Tanaka, Hisao. The Tapestry of Proliferation: “The New Face of the South.” The Economist, Mosquitoes, , The Sound and the Politics of Classic American Literature. The World of Faulkner’s Fiction. New July 30, 1994, report on weeklong symposium Fury, As I Lay Dying and Light in August. Included among 12 essays is “The African- Study of Faulkner by Tanaka, professor of on “The American South” discussing Mellen University Press, 1996. (XVI, iv, 4) American Voice: William Faulkner’s Go Down, American Literature at Hiroshima University Faulkner’s South, characters, passions, Moses.” Rowe argues that “Faulkner cannot explores how Faulkner proliferated his history and legacy. (XIV, iv, 4) Wagner-Martin, Linda, ed. New Essays on Go speak for Southern African Americans, “cosmos” with the invention of Jefferson Down, Moses. The American Novel Series. no matter how profoundly he claims to and Yoknapatawpha County, its map, the Towner, Theresa M. Faulkner on the Color Examines Go Down, Moses as Faulkner’s understand” them. Columbia University use and reuse of characters and families, Line: The Later Novels. An examination of “mature statement about responsibility … Press, 1997. (XVIII, ii, 4) repetition and variation of themes. Nan’Un- Intruder in the Dust, Requiem for a Nun, that all the romance in the world … could not do Publishing Co., 1997. (XVIII, ii, 4) the Snopes trilogy, A Fable and The Reivers substitute for living a humane life that valued Ruppersburg, Hugh M., ed. Reading Faulkner: to argue against prevailing scholarly opinion other people, black as well as white. Go Down, Light in August. Glossary and commentary Teaching Faulkner, No. 6 (Fall 1994). Robert that Faulkner’s creative powers declined after Moses was his testament of adulthood.” by Ruppersburg, head of English Dept. at W. Hamblin, editor. Contributors include he won the Nobel Prize. University Press of Cambridge University Press, 1996. (XVII, i, 2) University of Georgia, on the first title in the Caroline Carvill and Pamela H. Hearn. Mississippi, 2000. (XX, iv, 4) Reading Faulkner series, Noel Polk, general Published by the Center for Faulkner Studies Waldron, Ann. Eudora: A Writer’s Life. editor. University Press of Mississippi, 1994. at SE Missouri State University. (XV, ii, 2) Toyama, Kiyoko. Kotoba to Inochi (Words and Unauthorized biography of Welty has five- (XV, ii, 2) Deeds). A record of the struggle between two page chapter devoted to Faulkner, with other Teaching Faulkner, No. 7 (Spring 1995). languages and two cultures by Ms Toyama, references to Faulkner appearing elsewhere, Schwartz, Amy E. “Homage to ‘Poppa’ and Robert W. Hamblin, ed., Charles A. Peek, assistant professor at the college of Culture drawing largely on Conversations with ‘Pappy’.” The Washington Post, Aug. 12, 1994. assoc. ed. Contributions by Joseph R. Urgo, and Communication of Tokyo Woman’s Eudora Welty, Peggy W. Prenshaw, ed., and Schwartz’s op-ed column on Faux Faulkner Mary Ellen Byrne, Annette Wannamaker and Christian University. Yushodo Press Co. Ltd., Faulkner: A Biography, by Joseph Blotner. and International Imitation Hemingway Ulf Kirchdorfer. Published by the Center 1994. (XV, ii, 2) Doubleday, 1998. (XIX, i, 2) contests and 1994 winning entries, including for Faulkner Studies, SE Missouri State interviews with Dean Faulkner Wells and University. (XVI, i, 4) Urgo, Joseph R. and Ann J. Abadie, eds. Weinstein, Philip M. What Else But Love? The Jack Hemingway. (XIV, iv, 4) Faulkner in America. Ten papers read at the Ordeal of Race in Faulkner and Morrison. Teaching Faulkner, No. 8 (Fall 1995). Robert 1998 F & Y Conference examining “Faulkner’s Comparison of race and gender in the novels Sharpe, Anita. “Faulkner’s Shade Looms Over W. Hamblin, ed. Charles A. Peek, assoc. place in American literature.” Contributors of Faulkner and Toni Morrison, what they say Oxford, His Mississippi Home.” The Wall ed. Contributors Chris Bradley, Pamela S. include Richard Godden, Catherine G. Kodat, about the “limits and powers of one race or Street Journal, May 3, 1995, p. 1, A9. Faulkner Saur, Alan Thomas and Shannon Donoghue. Kathryn B. McKee, Peter Nicolaison, Charles gender’s representation of another.” Columbia as muse for writers living in his hometown; Published by the Center for Faulkner Studies, A. Peek, Noel Polk, Hortense J. Spillers, Linda University Press, 1996. (XVII, ii, 2) report on third annual Oxford Conference for SE Missouri State University. (XVI, ii, 2) Wagner-Martin and Charles Reagan Wilson. the Book. (XVI, i, 4) University Press of Mississippi, 2001. (XXI, Weinstein, Philip M., ed. The Cambridge Teaching Faulkner, No. 10 (Fall 1996). Robert iii, 1) Companion to William Faulkner. Collection Singal, Daniel J. William Faulkner: The W. Hamblin, ed; Charles A. Peek, assoc. ed. of essays by Richard C. Moreland, Patrick Making of a Modernist. “Perhaps no other Contributors include Allen Frye, Stephen Van Riper, Frank. “Contrasting Masters.” O’Donnell, John Matthews, Andre Bleikasten, major American writer would struggle as hard Hahn and Mary Ellen Byrne. Published by The Washington Post, Oct. 29, 1999, p. 64. Ramon Saldivar, Cheryl Lester, Judith b. as Faulkner did,“ writes Singal, “to become a the Center for Faulkner Studies, SE Missouri Review of National Gallery of Art exhibit Wittenberg, Carolyn Porter and Warwick Modernist, fighting to overcome the claims State University. (XVII, ii, 2) of photographs by Gyula Halasz and Henri Wadlington. Cambridge University Press, of family and region.“ University of North Cartier-Bresson, including Cartier-Bresson’s 1995. (XV, iv, 3) Carolina Press, 1997. (XVIII, i, 4) Teaching Faulkner, No. 11 (Spring, Summer 1947 photo of Faulkner on the grounds of 1997). Robert W. Hamblin, ed., Charles A. Rowan Oak with his terriers, “his keen eye Wells, Dean Faulkner. “My ‘Victory’ Garden.” Skei, Hans H., ed. William Faulkner’s Short Peek, assoc. ed. Contributors include Janice cloaked in the afternoon shadow.” (XX, i, 3) Southern Accents, Vol. 19, No. 3 (May-June Fiction: An International Symposium. A. Powell, Robert Henningsen and Rosemary 1996). Faulkner’s niece writes of reviving a Papers read by 27 scholars at International Bradford Grant. Published by the Center Vanderwerken, David L. Faulkner’s Literary neglected garden at her Oxford home started Faulkner Symposium in Oslo in 1995, focusing for Faulkner Studies, SE Missouri State Children: Patterns of Development. Vol. by her grandmother, Maud Butler Falkner, on Faulkner’s “habit of re-using material in University. (XVIII, i, 4) 8 in “Modern American Literature: New who lived in the home from 1931 until her new contexts, in particular the re-use of story Approaches” series, Yoshinobu Hakutani, death in 1960. For inspiration, Wells drew material in longer works of fiction.” Oslo: Teaching Faulkner, No. 14 (Fall 1998). general editor. Examines childhoods of on recollections of “the spring when Pappy Solum Forlag, 1997. (XXI, i, 3) Robert W. Hamblin, ed., Charles A. Peek, Joe Christmas, Quentin Compson, Thomas … my uncle, William Faulkner … grew his assoc. ed. “Frenchman’s Bend and Its Piety Sutpen and Isaac McCaslin, their abuse, victory garden.” (XVII, i, 2) Skei, Hans H. Reading Faulkner’s Best Short in Faulkner’s As I Lay Dying,” by Peek, and neglect and “anachronistic childhood.” Peter Stories. Introduction to Faulkner as short “Salinger’s Holden Caulfield and Faulkner’s Lang Publishing, 1997. (XVIII, ii, 4) Werner, Craig Hansen. Playing the Changes: story writer contains studies of 12 stories Quentin Compson,“ by Hamblin. Published From Afro-Modernism to the Jazz as “representatives of his most successful by the Center for Faulkner Studies at SE Vejnoska, Jill. “Revival at Rowan Oak: Price Impulse. Eleven inter-related essays include achievement within the genre.” University of Missouri State University. (XIX, iii, 2) of Preservation Doesn’t Deter Devotees of a “Endurance and Excavation: Afro-American South Carolina Press, 1999. (XIX, iii, 2) Private Man, a Literary Landmark.” Atlanta Responses to Faulkner.” University of Illinois Teaching Faulkner, No. 15 (Fall 1999). Robert Journal-Constitution, October 29, 2000, M1- Press, 1995. (XV, iv, 3) Smith, Starr. “Literary Landmark: William W. Hamblin, ed., and Charles A. Peek, assoc. 4. Report on visit to Rowan Oak in response Faulkner’s Rowan Oak where classics took ed. Contributors include Laurel Longe, Robert to announcement of Rowan Oak Society’s $5 White, Mary Wheeling. Fighting the Current: shape.” Montgomery Advertiser, Montgomery, Hamblin and Judy K. Grear. Published by the million drive for preservation of Faulkner’s The Life and Work of Evelyn Scott. References AL, April 18, 1999, H-1. Column by Smith Center for Faulkner Studies at SE Missouri home: “The writer’s presence is still almost to Faulkner include novelist Evelyn Scott’s on Rowan Oak and its attraction as a major State University. (XXI, i, 3) palpable.” Includes interviews with Faulkner’s essay “On William Faulkner’s ‘The Sound and tourist site. (XIX, iii, 2) daughter, Jill Summers, and niece Dean F. the Fury’” (1929), written after publishers Teaching Faulkner, No. 16 (Spring 2000). Wells. Photos by Bruce Newman. (XXI, i, 3,4) Jonathan Cape and Harrison Smith sent The Southern Quarterly, Vol. 34, No. 2 (Winter Robert W. Hamblin, ed., and Charles A. Peek, her the manuscript. Cape and Smith hoped 1996). Contents include “William Faulkner’s assoc. ed. Contributions include Helen R. Verich, Thomas, Leigh McWhite and Jennifer that The Sound and the Fury would “place ‘Dr. Martino,’” by Molly Boyd, and “Faulkner Atsma’s study of Calvinism in The Sound Ford. Special Collections 1975-2000: A William Faulkner in company with Evelyn and the Fury and Charles A. Peek’s guide to in Context: Seeing ‘That Evening Sun’ Through Silver Anniversary Exhibition. Catalog Scott.” Louisiana State University Press, 1998. teaching Go Down, Moses. Published by the the Blues,” by Carol B. Gartner. Published by of special exhibit features Faulkner items (XX, ii, 2) Center for Faulkner Studies at SE Missouri the University of Southern Mississippi. (XVI, such as a printed card of William Faulkner’s State University. (XXI, i, 3) iv, 3, 4) birth announcement, Sept. 25th, 1897, a letter Whitt, Jan. Allegory and the Modern Teaching Faulkner, No. 17 (Fall 2000). Robert from Faulkner to Irby C. Dean, and a Martin Southern Novel. Whitt explores work of Stewart, George G. “Yoknapatawpha: Images W. Hamblin, ed., Charles A. Peek, assoc. ed. Dain photo, as well as Ole Miss holdings Flanner O’Connor, Carson McCullers and and Voices.” Southern Cultures, Vol. 4, No. “Writing William Faulkner’s biography,” by of other Mississippi authors. Published by Faulkner as defined by religious allegory: the 3 (Fall 1998). 22 photographs of landmarks, Joseph Blotner, and “Dilsey, Shegog’s Sermon Special Collections, University of Mississippi “failed messiahs” of Go Down, Moses and monuments, architecture and locales in and the Meaning of Time,” by John Williams. Libraries, 2000. (XXI, iv, 2) “Transformation” in Light in August. Mercer Oxford and Lafayette County by Stewart Published by the Center for Faulkner Studies, University Press, 1994. (XIX, iv, 1,4) accompanied by quotations drawn from SE Missouri State University. (XXI, ii, 3) Verich, Thomas A. A Faulkner 100: The Faulkner’s work form a tribute to Faulkner’s Centennial Exhibition. With a contribution William Faulkner: The Sound and the “mythological county.” Published by the Teaching Faulkner, No. 18 (Spring 2001). by Gabriel Garcia Marquez. Photos, artwork, Fury, As I Lay Dying. Nicholas Tredell, Center for the Study of the American South at Robert W. Hamblin, ed., Charles A. Peek, signed documents and ephemera from the ed. Columbia Critical Guides Casebound UNC/Chapel Hill. (XX, iv, 4) assoc. ed. Contents include article on teaching Ole Miss Collection of Faulkneriana, edited series sets the two novels “in the context of Faulkner to Medical residents, by Karl by archivist Verich. Published by Special Faulkner’s life and work,” includes outlines Sugarman, Helen Lynn. “’He was getting it Kirkland; on and Mr. Kurtz, Collections, University of Mississippi of criticism. Columbia University Press, 1999. involved with himself’: Identity and Reflexivity by Amy Linnemann; on a “West coast view” Libraries. (XVIII, ii, 4) Nicholas Tredell teaches at the University of in William Faulkner’s Light in August and of Faulkner, by CoCo Krume; on The Sound Absalom, Absalom!” The Southern Quarterly, Sussex. (XXI, ii, 3) Vol. XXXVI, No. 2 (Winter 1998). Published at and the Fury, by Anna J. Street. Published by Visser, Irene. Compassion in Faulkner’s the University of Southern Mississippi. (XIX, the Center for Faulkner Studies, SE Missouri Fiction. Based on Visser’s reading of “William Faulkner 1897-1962. Oxford, i, 2) State University. (XXI, iv, 2) Faulkner’s critics and of Soldiers’ Pay, Mississippi. Honoring His 100th Birthday, https://egrove.olemiss.edu/faulkner_nl/vol0/iss2/112 12 Wells: Index 2 (1994-2001)

Sept. 25, 1997.” 12-page centennial “keepsake” resurrection, of freedom from the “yoke” of published by Square Books in Oxford, worldliness. Published by Tsuru University, illustrated with Martin Dain photos and Tsuru City, Japan. (XIX, iii, 2) Faulkner’s map of Yoknapatawpha County from Absalom, Absalom! and a brief history ⎯⎯ “A Study of William Faulkner and of Rowan Oak by John Cox. (XVIII, ii, 4) Nagano.” Tsuru Studies in English Linguistics and Literature, No. 24 (1996). Wilson, Charles Reagan. Judgment & Grace Professor Yorifuji records the role of Fumio in Dixie: Southern Faiths from Faulkner Sasaki, chief of the Nagano Japan-America to Elvis. Essays on “religion’s role in Cultural Center, in hosting Faulkner’s visit for southern culture.” Though Faulkner has been the Nagano Seminar on American Literature considered agnostic or atheistic, “his explicit in 1955. Published by Tsuru University statements suggest he claimed a broad Association of English Literature, Tsuru, Christianity.” University of Georgia Press, Japan. (XVII, i, 4) 1995. (XVII, i, 2, 4)

Winchell, Mark Royden. Cleanth Brooks and the Rise of Modern Criticism. “Minds of the New South” series. Numerous references to Faulkner in this survey of literary criticism in 20th C. America, tracing the influence of Cleanth Brooks, especially his contributions to Faulkner studies. University Press of Virginia, 1997. (XVII, ii, 2)

Wolff, Sally with Floyd C. Watkins. Talking About William Faulkner: Interviews with Jimmy Faulkner and Others. Interviews with Faulkner’s nephew, Jimmy Faulkner, general-store owner Pearle Galloway, and roadhouse proprietor and bootlegger, Motee Daniels, during field trips to Oxford with students from Emory University in the 1960s and 1970s. Louisiana State University Press, 1996. (XVII, i, 4)

Wyatt, David. “Faulkner’s Hundred.” The Southern Review, Vol. 33, No. 1 (Winter 1997). By the centennial year of Faulkner’s birth, between 350 and 400 books have been written about Faulkner; first dissertation appeared in 1941; PMLA bibliographies contained more entries on Faulkner than any other living writer. Published by the University of Southern Mississippi. (XVII, ii, 2)

Yorifugi, Michio. “A Study of Sanctuary: A Pistol vs. A Book.” The Tsuru University Review, Tsuru, Japan, No. 43, Sept. 27, 1995. Professor Yorifugi focuses on Popeye and Horace Benbow and “conflicts among the various values of modern American society and its tragic and ironical aspects.” (XVI, ii, 2)

⎯⎯ “A Study of William Faulkner’s ‘Jefferson’ based on the field work.” Tsuru Studies in English Linguistics and Literature, No. 44 (1996). Writing in Japanese with notes in English, Professor Yorifuji examines the influences of Oxford, Ripley, Holly Springs and New Albany on Faulkner’s ‘Jefferson.’ Published by Tsuru University Association of English Literature, Tsuru, Japan. (XVII, i, 4)

⎯⎯ The Making of the Faulkner Literature. Japanese-language study of Soldiers’ Pay, Sartoris, The Sound and the Fury, Absalom, Absalom! Professor Yorifuji also reports on recollections of Faulkner’s presence at Nagano by Fumio Sasaki, chief of the Nagano Cultural Center and host of the 1955 Nagano conference. Seibido Publishing Co., 1997. (XVIII, ii, 4)

⎯⎯ “A Consideration of the Families in the Faulkner Literature.” Tsuru Studies in English Linguistics and Literature, No. 26 (1998). Study, in English, of Sartoris, Compson, Sutpen, McCaslin and Snopes families. Published by Tsuru University Association of English Literature. (XIX, iii, 2)

⎯⎯ “On the Relation Between Man and Nature in Faulkner and Thoreau.” The Tsuru University Review, No. 49, 1998. To Faulkner, the wilderness is a place of initiation for a young man as well as of escape and relief; while to Thoreau it is a source of life and

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