Light in August -

    William Faulkner

    iHelp Press
    2015
    523 páginas
    17h 26m
    ISBN-13: 1230000298053

    Light in August, set in Faulkner’s oft used Yoknapatawpha County, follows three separate yet connected storylines that focuses on race and violence in the deep South. The novel opens with a pregnant Lena Grove traveling the South on foot to find her baby’s father, a man she knows by the name of Lucas Burch but is actually named Joe Brown. Lena’s search leads her to a man named Byron Bunch, who everyone thinks she must mean, and Byron quickly becomes obsessed with Lena, wishes to marry her, and subsequently keeps her from the baby’s father. The second storyline focuses on Joe Christmas, a troubled man who is uncertain about his birth and believes himself to be half-black. He works at a local lumber mill but only in an attempt to disguise his illegal liquor business where he makes most of his money. He becomes partners with a man named Joe Brown. The third and final story to tie everything together is Gail Hightower, a local ex-minister after he became involved in scandal that forever tarnished his name. The novel is richly written, exquisitely descriptive and oftentimes complex as it alternates being multiple individuals and also between their pasts and their present. Each separate story continues on its own path yet they are all skilfully and slowly intertwining leaving the reader oblivious to the obvious connections until the pieces finally come together at the end. “It is just dawn, daylight: that gray and lonely suspension filled with the peaceful and tentative waking of birds. The air, inbreathed, is like spring water. He breathes deep and slow, feeling with each breath himself diffuse in the neutral grayness, becoming one with loneliness and quiet that has never known fury or despair.”

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    Marcos Mendonça picture
    Marcos Mendonça31/05/2018Resenhou um livro
    4 (Muito bom)

    Envolvente e maduro, mas...

    O primeiro capítulo me deixou boquiaberto pela forma como a prosa do Faulkner prende o leitor e pelas possibilidades que a jornada da Lena criam. O autor segue criando uma história bem complexa, desvendada aos poucos e sob diferentes perspectivas. O tema e a abordagem são interessantíssimos e na maior parte do tempo me prenderam, mas de uns 70% em diante foi ficando confuso. Os flashbacks de alguns personagens tem muitas semelhanças e o Faulkner sugere muitas coisas que não consegui, me parece, captar. No finalzinho me perdi completamente, quando ele 'entra' na mente de um dos personagens e 'narra' seus pensamentos por várias páginas, me perdi mesmo. Ainda assim, não tem como não reconhecer o valor da obra e a qualidade da escrita do Faulkner.

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    4.4 / 17
    • 5 estrelas59%
    • 4 estrelas35%
    • 3 estrelas0%
    • 2 estrelas6%
    • 1 estrelas0%