Summary
William Faulkner's 1936 novel Absalom, Absalom! is widely regarded as one of the greatest works of Southern Gothic literature. Set in the antebellum South, the novel explores themes of family, race, and the weight of history through the story of Thomas Sutpen and his ill-fated quest to establish a dynasty. Faulkner's innovative narrative technique, which employs multiple narrators and non-linear storytelling, challenges readers to piece together the complex tale. This epic novel contributed to Faulkner being awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1949.
Plot
Thomas Sutpen arrives in Jefferson, Mississippi in the 1830s with a group of slaves and a French architect. He acquires a large plot of land and builds an impressive plantation called Sutpen's Hundred. Sutpen marries Ellen Coldfield and has two children, Henry and Judith. Years later, Henry befriends Charles Bon at university and brings him home, where Charles and Judith begin a romance. However, Sutpen reveals to Henry that Charles is actually his half-brother from a previous marriage in Haiti, causing turmoil in the family.
The story unfolds through various narrators, including Rosa Coldfield (Ellen's sister) and Quentin Compson, whose grandfather was Sutpen's friend. As the tale is retold, more details emerge about Sutpen's past, including his first marriage to Eulalia Bon and his discovery that she was of mixed race. This revelation led Sutpen to abandon his wife and son, Charles. The Civil War interrupts the family drama, with Henry and Charles enlisting in the Confederate Army. After the war, Henry kills Charles to prevent his marriage to Judith, then flees into exile.
Sutpen returns from the war to find his plantation in ruins. He proposes to Rosa but insults her, leading to her departure. Sutpen then has an affair with Milly Jones, a teenage girl who bears him a daughter. Disappointed at not having a male heir, Sutpen rejects Milly and the child, prompting Milly's grandfather to kill Sutpen. Years later, Quentin and Rosa visit the abandoned Sutpen's Hundred, where they find Henry and Clytie, Sutpen's daughter by a slave. The novel concludes with Clytie burning down the mansion, killing herself and Henry, leaving only Jim Bon, Charles Bon's grandson, as the last living Sutpen descendant.
Themes
• Legacy of slavery and racism in the American South
• Obsession with family lineage and dynasty
• Destructive nature of ambition and pride• Unreliability of historical narrative and memory• Complexity of truth and multiple perspectives• Impact of the past on the present• Tragedy of the American Dream in the South