This Norton Critical Edition is based on the 1985 corrected text and is accompanied by detailed explanatory annotations.
��ackgrounds and Contexts��is divided into three sections, each of which includes a concise introduction by Michael Gorra that carefully frames the issues presented, with particular attention
to As I Lay Dying's place in Faulkner's literary life. ��ontemporary Reception��reprints American, English, and French reviews by Clifton Fadiman, Henry Nash Smith, Edwin Muir, and
Maurice Coindreau, among others, along with Valery Larbaud's never-before-translated preface to the first French edition of the novel. ��he Writer and His Work��examines Faulkner's claim to
have written the novel in six weeks without changing a word. It includes his comments on the book's composition along with his later thoughts on and changing opinions of it, sample pages from
the manuscript, his Nobel Prize address, and the little-known short story in which he first used the title. ��ultural Context��reprints an essay by Carson McCullers and an excerpt from James
Agee's Let Us Now Praise Famous Men along with other materials that address questions of Southern Agrarianism and the Southern grotesque.
��riticism��begins with the editor's introduction to As I Lay Dying's critical history and scholarly reception. Eleven major essays are provided by Olga W. Vickery, Cleanth Brooks, Calvin
Bedient, Andr�穢 Bleikasten, Eric Sundquist, Stephen M. Ross, Doreen Fowler, Patrick O'Donnell, Richard Gray, John Limon, and Donald M. Kartiganer.
A Chronology and a Selected Bibliography are also included.