Matches in Harvard for { <http://id.lib.harvard.edu/aleph/001274050/catalog> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 21 of
21
with 100 items per page.
- catalog abstract ""My brother Bill is little concerned with the public image of William Faulkner; rather it is about Bill Faulkner as a boy, growing up in the environment which furnished him with most of the raw material about which he later wrote, and as a man who retained for all of his life an almost mystical feeling for his native land. It is an intimate portrait, etched deeply iwth humor, of a man fiercely loyal to his family and old friends, though he often disagreeed violently with each of them; of a man steeped in the gamey, Rabelaisian humor of the Frontier, which seems mainly to have survived only in the South; and of a man who both loved and hated his native ground because it never lived up to what he felt it capable of being. It is a book remarkable not only for its many insights into one of our most significant writers, but for its unique re-creation, in every detail, of the all-but-forgotten life in a southern village at the turn of the century, a picture sketched with rare skill and humor and a deep sense of nostalgia in the best sense of the word." -- publisher's description.".
- catalog contributor b1793897.
- catalog created "1963.".
- catalog date "1963".
- catalog date "1963.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "1963.".
- catalog description ""My brother Bill is little concerned with the public image of William Faulkner; rather it is about Bill Faulkner as a boy, growing up in the environment which furnished him with most of the raw material about which he later wrote, and as a man who retained for all of his life an almost mystical feeling for his native land. It is an intimate portrait, etched deeply iwth humor, of a man fiercely loyal to his family and old friends, though he often disagreeed violently with each of them; of a man steeped in the gamey, Rabelaisian humor of the Frontier, which seems mainly to have survived only in the South; and of a man who both loved and hated his native ground because it never lived up to what he felt it capable of being. It is a book remarkable not only for its many insights into one of our most significant writers, but for its unique re-creation, in every detail, of the all-but-forgotten life in a southern village at the turn of the century, a picture sketched with rare skill and humor and a deep sense of nostalgia in the best sense of the word." -- publisher's description.".
- catalog extent "277 p.".
- catalog hasFormat "My brother Bill.".
- catalog isFormatOf "My brother Bill.".
- catalog issued "1963".
- catalog issued "1963.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "New York : Trident Press,".
- catalog relation "My brother Bill.".
- catalog subject "928.1".
- catalog subject "Faulkner, William, 1897-1962 Family.".
- catalog subject "Faulkner, William, 1897-1962.".
- catalog subject "PS3511.A86 Z783".
- catalog title "My brother Bill: an affectionate reminiscence.".
- catalog type "text".