Absalom, Absalom!

Absalom, Absalom!

by

Published Date: 2026

Original price was: ₹399.00.Current price is: ₹379.00.

A SOUTHERN GOTHIC MASTERPIECE • A harrowing tale of ambition, obsession, and the inescapable grip of the past—Faulkner at his most haunting and profound.
The novel that redefined American modernism and exposed the fractured soul of the South.

“Maybe nothing ever happens once and is finished.” —William Faulkner

At the heart of Absalom, Absalom! lies Thomas Sutpen, a mysterious man who rises from poverty to build a plantation empire in Mississippi—only to watch it crumble under the weight of secrets, betrayal, and racial taboo. Through the eyes of multiple narrators, including the tormented Quentin Compson, the story unfolds like a shattered mirror: distorted, fragmented, and deeply human.

As legends unravel and truths remain just out of reach, Faulkner leads readers through a tangled web of memory and myth, where the sins of the fathers return to claim the sons, and where the South’s grand narrative is revealed as both tragic and terrifying.

A brilliant, brooding portrait of a doomed dynasty, Absalom, Absalom! is a towering exploration of race, power, and identity in a haunted land. Nearly a century after its publication, it endures as one of Faulkner’s most challenging and unforgettable works—a novel that dares to ask whether history can ever truly be told.

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ONE OF THE GREAT MODERNIST NOVELS • William Faulkner’s epic tale of ambition, race, and legacy, ranked among the Modern Library’s 100 Best Novels.

Thomas Sutpen arrives in Mississippi with nothing but a vision. He builds a plantation, marries well, and dreams of founding a dynasty. But his ruthless pursuit of power brings betrayal, violence, and tragedy. Years later, as his story is pieced together by others—family, friends, and outsiders—it becomes clear that Sutpen’s “design” has left behind more ruin than triumph.

William Faulkner’s Absalom, Absalom! (1936) is both family saga and national allegory. Set against the backdrop of the American South before, during, and after the Civil War, it exposes the tangled roots of pride, race, and history. Its shifting narrators and layered storytelling push the boundaries of modernist style, demanding the reader to confront how truth itself is shaped by memory and perspective. Few lines capture its weight more than Quentin Compson’s haunting admission: “I don’t hate it…I don’t hate it!”—words that echo the inescapable pull of history.

This Feel Classics edition presents Faulkner’s challenging masterpiece in an accessible way for today’s readers. With a thoughtful introduction, explanatory notes, glossary, and a detailed chronology of the author’s life and work, it is ideal for students, first-time readers, and literature enthusiasts alike.

A daring, unforgettable classic that still speaks to anyone who has ever asked how the past defines who we are—and who we might become.

Additional information

Dimensions 139.7 mm
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