Sanctuary Audiobook By William Faulkner cover art

Sanctuary

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Sanctuary

By: William Faulkner
Narrated by: Stephen Hoye
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About this listen

A powerful novel examining the nature of evil, informed by the works of T. S. Eliot and Freud, mythology, local lore, and hard-boiled detective fiction, Sanctuary is the dark, at times brutal, story of the kidnapping of Mississippi debutante Temple Drake. She introduces her own form of venality into the Memphis underworld where she is being held.©1958 William Faulkner (P)2005 Random House, Inc. Classics Fiction Genre Fiction Gothic Horror Literary Fiction Small Town & Rural Scary
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Innovative Narrative • Crafted Moral Degradation • Sensational Features • Smooth Voice • Complex Hero
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Faulkner is the bard of the post Civil War South. No one can weave a tale like him. Possibly Americas greatest.

Irony of the Old South

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Took me 3 weeks--read alone leisurely w novel shall reread again. Love Faulkner. Xo Xo

Sanctuary

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Where does Sanctuary rank among all the audiobooks you’ve listened to so far?

A memorable listening experience. I found myself rewinding and listening repeatedly to passages. The prose is so rich that with each re-listen, more details emerge.

What other book might you compare Sanctuary to and why?

I have also listened to and loved Absalom, Absalom!, The Sound and the Fury, and Light in August. I preferred Sanctuary to Light in August, but do not consider Sanctuary as brilliant as Absalom or Sound.

What does Stephen Hoye bring to the story that you wouldn’t experience if you just read the book?

I must disagree with fellow readers who did not like Hoye's interpretations of the book's many Southern dialects. Hoye's voice sounds very similar to Faulkner's own inflections as heard in his Nobel speech. I also thought Hoye brought realism and authenticity to the range of voices in the novel which span the social classes--from the Memphis Madam, Miss Reba, to Horace Benbow's gentrified drawl, to the hillbilly twang of the bootleggers

Loved the reader!

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This a relatively overlooked masterpiece. Supposedly more "commercial" than many of his later works, Faulkner tells a chilling story.

Terrific.

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Faulkner’s first commercial success tells of the rape and kidnapping of Temple Drake—a slight, coy “Ol’ Miss” student—the crime she witnesses, and the sordid aftermath of both. To help his wronged client and his family, lawyer Horace Benbow tries to discover Temple's whereabouts, all while under suspicion himself. While not Faulkner’s best work, it has merit belying his claim that it was a potboiler written merely for profit, as its sensational features are outshone by the craftsmanship involved in depicting different types and shades of moral degradation expressed through memorable characters as well as small groups and mobs. Stephen Hoye’s narration has an elegiac quality that implies that something is being lost with each sentence’s slow unfolding. This often suits a text that renders so much actual and perceived loss, but not always; it seems an inappropriate way to read, for instance, a description of a table being set. The Southern dialect was believable (to this ignorant Northerner, anyway), and most characters were differentiated adequately, though failure to modulate pitch at times caused confusion.

Possibly inflated rating from big Faulkner fan

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Not Faulkner's best by a long shot, but the book is better than the narrator allows it to be. The effect is similar to that of having a mosquito at your ear while you are trying to sleep. . . .

Painful

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Compared to other interpretations of Faulkner's novels, this reader fell short. Boring. Only the great story written by Faulkner, with a life of its own stood up for itself.

Performance

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I lived it. The narrator was superb and reading this book reminds me of my pa.

great read

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This the darkest Faulkner I have read. I can't say I enjoyed it very much. I fear it is much more true to life than I would like to think. definitely no happy ending.

Dark and unrelenting

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I feel like its narrative structure inspired Pulp Fiction. I found the first third of the book a little slow. and annoying. During the second third I started to think "This is pretty good and there is a lot more going on under the surface than first meets the eye. In the midst of the last third it hits you in the face that this book is not only brilliantly constructed, but very innovative narratively considering when it was first published. Its a dark, mean, deep and amazing novel. I loved it and recommended it highly.

Deceptively brilliant.

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