5 111 résultats
192969733New York:: Harcourt Brace And Company 1929. First edition; first printing; one of only 1998 copies. Publisher's black cloth in dust jacket. Good to very good; with wear to the corners and the extremities of the spine. The jacket is chipped particularly at the backstrip and it has been neatly reinforced on the verso in several places with Japanese tissue. Sartoris is very seldom found with an inscription by Faulkner. 8vo. Inscribed on the front free endpaper: "To Frances Eubanks from Bill Faulkner 25 June 1929." Harcourt, Brace And Company, hardcover
19295279New York: Jonathan Cape and Harrison Smith 1929. First edition. Near Fine/Very Good . A Near Fine copy of the book in a Very Good dust jacket. Book with a bright white spine previous owner's bookplate on the front paste-down and just slight toning and wear at extremities. Jacket with the spine well faded as usual and a small repair to the front lower corner replacing a small chip. Additional wear at the crown but no other repairs or restoration. First state jacket with "Humanity Uprooted" correctly priced at $3.00.<br /> <br /> Faulkner's masterpiece - and one of the towering classics of American literature. The Sound and the Fury follows the travails of the Compsons a once prominent family in Jefferson Mississippi. Originally Faulkner began the work as a group of short stories about the Compsons but decided it would be better suited as a novel - and a very experimental one at that. A contemporary review in the Nashville Tennessean described it: "Not an easy book. It cannot be read objectively; the reader if he is to savor the best in this book must surrender himself entirely. The story has much beauty but it is a beauty that hath terror in it the beauty of pathos and tragedy. Never had I adequately known the meaning of pathos until I read the first part of this book." Faulkner's style was too complex for the novel to be an immediate hit but in time it assumed an important place in the canon and was cited as one of the reasons Faulkner was awarded the Nobel Prize in 1949. The novel appears on Modern Library's 100 Best English Novels of the 20th century and Le Monde's list of the 100 Books of the Century. Near Fine in Very Good dust jacket. Jonathan Cape and Harrison Smith unknown
1929140938541New York: Jonathan Cape & Harrison Smith 1929. First Edition. Near Fine/Very Good. First edition first printing. Bound in publisher's black and white Art Deco style boards over white cloth spine lettered in black. Near Fine with toning to pages and top and bottom edges of covers. In a Very Good first issue dust jacket with Humanity Uprooted priced at $3.00 on the rear panel; toning to spine with fading to red print there light edge wear light soiling and erased pencil notation to rear flap corner. A fantastic copy in the scarce first issue dust jacket. Jonathan Cape & Harrison Smith unknown
193982215Ottawa:: W. L. Massiah December 1939. First separate published edition. original purple velour-finish wrappers stamped in gold. Preserved in a custom quarter morocco clamshell box. A very good copy. Peterson A21.2: "By far the rarest of Faulkner's published books.printed in Canada as an inspirational piece to be distributed at the Christmas season 1939 the first winter of World War II." W. L. Massiah, unknown
1929179027New York: Jonathan Cape and Harrison Smith 1929. First edition in the first issue dust jacket of the author's modernist masterpiece his favourite of his own works: "It's a real son-of-a-bitch. This one's the greatest I'll ever write" quoted in Churchwell. The Sound and the Fury is Faulkner's fourth novel and the second set in the fictional Yoknapatawpha Country Mississippi. Faulkner's first Yoknapatawpha story Flags in the Dust was initially turned down by his publishers and only published after heavy editing as Sartoris 1928. Out of this frustration came The Sound and the Fury: "I continued to shop Sartoris about for three years with a stubborn and fading hope perhaps to justify the time which I had spent writing it. This hope died slowly though it didn't hurt at all. One day I seemed to shut a door between me and all publishers' addresses and book lists. I said to myself Now I can write. Now I can make myself a vase like that which the old Roman kept at his bedside and wore the rim slowly away with kissing it. So I who had never had a sister and was fated to lose my daughter in infancy set out to make myself a beautiful and tragic little girl" Faulkner. Octavo. Original white quarter cloth spine lettered in black black-and-white patterned paper boards and endpapers top edge blue. With dust jacket. Spine ends and joints lightly toned superficial cracks to front inner hinge; jacket rubbed nicks and tears neatly repaired restoration to head of spine and rear panel with two small portions supplied in facsimile flaps unpriced as issued: a very good copy in very good jacket. Sarah Churchwell "Rereading The Sound and the Fury by William Faulkner" The Guardian 20 July 2012; William Faulkner "An Introduction for The Sound and the Fury" The Southern Review 1972 pp. 705-10. hardcover
1932207245New York: Harrison Smith & Robert Haas 1932. First Edition; First Printing. Hardcover. Very Good in a Very Good price clipped dust jacket. All 4 flap corners clipped. Small book store bookplate on bottom of FEP. First Issue with Jefferson' for 'Mottstown' on p340 line 1. Harrison Smith & Robert Haas hardcover
1954145440New York: Random House 1954. First edition of the first novel to win both Pulitzer and National Book Award. Octavo original cloth. Boldly signed by the author on the title page "William Faulkner 2 March 1961 Oxford Miss." Fine in a near fine dust jacket. Jacket design by Riki Levinson. Rare and desirable signed. The Fable won both the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award in 1955. An allegorical story of World War I set in the trenches in France and dealing ostensibly with a mutiny in a French regiment it was originally considered a sharp departure for Faulkner. Recently it has come to be recognized as one of his major works and an essential part of the Faulkner oeuvre. Faulkner himself fought in the war and his descriptions of it "rise to magnificence" according to The New York Times and include in Malcolm Cowley's words "some of the most powerful scenes he ever conceived." Petersen A31b Random House hardcover
1948114816New York: Random House 1948. First edition of this classic Faulkner novel which explores the lives of a family of characters in the South. Octavo original cloth. Association copy inscribed by the author on the front free endpaper "For Sally Burns William Faulkner 16 April." The recipient Sallie Faulkner Burns was William Faulkner‘s first cousin and was a great friend to Maud William‘s mother. This was given to her by Faulkner and has remained in the family until now. Near fine in a near fine dust jacket with a touch of rubbing. Jacket design by E. McKnight Kauffer. Housed in a custom half morocco clamshell box. Set in the deep south that provided the backdrop for all of Faulkner's finest fiction Intruder in the Dust is the novel that marks the final phase of its author's outstanding creative period. The chronicle of an elderly black farmer arrested for the murder of a white man and under threat from the lynch mob is a characteristically Faulknerian tale of dark omen its sole ray of hope the character of the young white boy who repays an old favour by proving the innocence of the man who saved him from drowning in an icy creek. Random House hardcover
19325215New York: Harrison Smith and Robert Haas 1932. First Edition. Faulkner's seventh novel set in the American South during the days of Prohibition and Jim Crow exploring themes of race class sex and faith. "At its base this is a simple small-town idyll but in execution it becomes a complex novel packed with comedy violent misfortune and implicit moral and social commentary. Four major characters lead frustrated lives: a part-Negro who passes for white and finally ends the victim of a mob; a preacher whose religion doesn't meet reality; a lonely woman; a migratory worker" Coan America in Fiction p.58. One of the defining books of the 1930's and cited in The Modern Library's "100 Best Novels" list. Petersen A13a. First Printing one of 8500 copies. Octavo 21cm; coarse tan cloth with titles stamped in orange and blue on spine and front cover; orange topstain; dustjacket; iv480pp. Fine in a very Near Fine dustjacket unclipped priced $2.50 with some pinpoint wear to extremities and a single tiny tear to upper front joint - a vibrant example rich in color with the spine entirely unfaded. Lacking the original glassine overlay but housed in a custom half-morocco slipcase and chemise. Harrison Smith and Robert Haas unknown
193582231New York:: Harrison Smith and Robert Haas 1935. First edition. publisher's cloth in dust jacket. Usual darkening and partial flaking to the gold lettering on the binding; otherwise a very good copy in a very good jacket which has some fading and browning to the backstrip and back panel. . 8vo. Signed and inscribed by William Faulkner 12 Dec 1935 to Lawrence Edmunds the founder of the Lawrence Edmunds bookshop in Hollywood. Harrison Smith and Robert Haas, hardcover
1953144084London: Chatto & Windus 1953. First British edition of the sequel to Faulkner's Sanctuary. Octavo original cloth. Association copy inscribed by the author on the front free endpaper in the year of publication on the title page and with an original drawing by Faulkner on the front free endpaper "For John Bott William Faulkner New York 3 Mar 1953." The recipient John Bott was the City Editor of the New York Post who wore leg braces his whole life due to polio. Bott's friend had just brought him the book from London. Near fine in a near fine dust jacket. Jacket design by Paul Hogarth. A unique example with a wonderful association and with a rare original drawing from the Nobel Prize-winning writer. The sequel to Faulkner's early novel Sanctuary Requiem for a Nun follows the previously introduced characters of Temple Drake her friend later husband Gowan Stevens and Gowan's uncle Gavin Stevens. The events in Requiem are set in Faulkner's fictional Yoknapatawpha County and Jackson Mississippi in November 1937 and March 1938 eight years after the events of Sanctuary. In Requiem Temple now married with a child must learn to deal with her violent turbulent past as related in Sanctuary. Chatto & Windus hardcover
1931140949374New York: Jonathan Cape & Harrison Smith 1931. First Edition. Fine/Near Fine. First edition first printing. iv 380 pp. Bound in publisher's burgundy paper-covered boards over gray spine cloth lettered in burgundy black topstain patterned endpapers matching jacket motif. Very light scuffing to rear board else Fine unread condition. In a Near Fine unclipped $2.50 dust jacket with sunned spine panel very light edgewear including soft horizontal crease near lower edge of front panel faint offsetting from endpapers to flaps and penciled bookseller inscription to rear flap.<br /> <br /> <p>A sensational copy of Faulkner's sensational breakthrough novel a Southern Gothic tale of rape incest and murder. When he first sent the manuscript to Harrison Smith in the summer of 1929 the publisher rejected it with: "Good God I can't publish this. We'll both be in jail." Smith changed his mind the following year after the onset of the Great Depression made him eager for anything that would sell. Sell it did: the book appeared in February 1931 and went through six printings in as many months. Stephen Roberts toned down his 1933 film adaptation The Story of Temple Drake but it was still salacious enough to horrify critics and do well at the box office. William H. Hays hated it. Jonathan Cape & Harrison Smith unknown
193111481JNew York: Jonathan Cape & Harrison Smith 1931. First Edition. Fine copy in a bright attractive dust jacket which has some tiny internal mends to the edges by an expert paper conservationist. Jonathan Cape & Harrison Smith unknown
1959146144New York: Random House 1959. First edition of the final novel in the Nobel Prize-winning author's classic The Snopes Trilogy. Octavo original cloth. Boldly signed and dated by the author on the title page "William Faulkner Oxford Miss 22 Dec 1961." Fine in a near fine dust jacket. Housed in a custom half morocco and chemise box. The Mansion completes Faulkner’s great trilogy of the Snopes family in the mythical county of Yoknapatawpha Mississippi which also includes The Hamlet and The Town. Beginning with the murder of Jack Houston and ending with the murder of Flem Snopes it traces the downfall of this indomitable post-bellum family who managed to seize control of the town of Jefferson within a generation. Random House hardcover
1929112328New York: Jonathan Cape and Harrison Smith 1929. First edition of Faulkner’s masterpiece. Octavo original cloth black and white patterned paper boards. Near fine in a very good unrestored first-issue dust jacket with the iconic design by Kathe Kollwitz on the front panel and a price of $3.00 for the book Humanity Uprooted on the rear panel with a chip to the spine. Petersen A6.2a. Brucolli & Clark I:121. Housed in a custom half morocco clamshell box made by the Harcourt Bindery. Although The Sound and The Fury is now considered one of top one hundred novels of the 20th century it actually wasn’t initially received well upon publication. This was mostly due to the fact that at the time Faulkner wasn’t well-known as a novelist although this was his fourth published work. Because he had not had much commercial success with his first few novels it is believed that the publisher limited the initial printing run to 1789 copies. It wasn’t until his novel Sanctuary was published in 1931 that he started being really noticed as a writer and more people started giving The Sound and The Fury more serious attention. The title of the book comes from the famous soliloquy of act 5 scene 5 of Shakespeare’s Macbeth. Faulkner literally takes Shakespeare’s words and writes a "tale told by an idiot"… in this case from the point of view of the members of the Compson family who are former Mississippi aristocrats who fall into financial trouble and over a 30 year period many of whom die tragically in one way or another…. Or as Shakespeare put it… “the way to dusty deathâ€. Faulkner used a stream of consciousness method conceived by other novelists such as James Joyce and Virginia Wolf. Although this narrative style and lack of regard for sentence structure can often alienate new readers it is considered a masterpiece by literary critics and scholars and played a large role in Faulkner’s receiving the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1949. Jonathan Cape and Harrison Smith hardcover
192613482New York: Boni & Liveright 1926. First Edition First Printing. Cloth. Near fine/very good. First edition first printing of Soldiers' Pay by William Faulkner in a first state dust jacket. Octavo 319pp. Blue cloth title stamped in yellow on spine and front cover. Contemporary ownership inscription across half title. Solid text block light rubbing to tips of spine a near fine example. In the publisher's restored first state dust jacket. Retail price of $2.50 on front flap An American Tragedy listed on rear panel restoration to spine and flap folds bright illustrations. Housed in custom gray cloth clamshell case title in gilt over red spine label. Bruccoli & Clark 121 Petersen A2a A handsome example of Faulkner's first novel one of approximately 2500 copies. Provenance: Sold by Parke-Bernet Galleries of New York in 1940 part of the library of the late Paul Lemperly of Lakewood Ohio who was a notable book collector of association copies. Includes Lemperly's bookplate on front pastedown. Boni & Liveright unknown
1949139733Republique Francaise 1949. Partially printed diploma awarded to William Faulkner as an Officer of the Légion d'Honneur conferred on him be the French government five months after he accepted the 1949 Nobel Prize in Literature. One page partially printed and completed in a calligraphic hand the diploma is signed by three French officials with an embossed seal. In near fine condition. Matted. The entire piece measures 15 inches by 18.5 inches. From the collection of William Faulkner. The formal presentation of this diploma was made at the French consulate on St. Charles Avenue in New Orleans in late October 1951. Faulkner was accompanied by his wife and mother who dressed in their finest attire for the occasion. Faulkner himself had made light of the ceremony saying he saw no reason to dress up "to receive another diploma and perhaps be kissed on both cheeks." He appeared with shoes unshined trousers unpressed and wearing the jacket with leather elbow patches he often wore hunting. This bluff however could not completely hide the importance this lifelong francophile placed on this award. He wrote a three-paragraph acceptance speech in French and delivered it slowly and precisely. In the surviving manuscript of the speech given to Saxe Commins lacking many accent marks and with words misspelled Faulkner stated that an artist ought to receive with humility an award conferred on him by the country which had always been "la mere universelle des artists." An American should cherish any souvenir from the country which had always been "la soeur d'Amerique." A man ought to guard with hope and pride any accolade from the country which was "la mere de la liberte de l'homme et de l'esprit humaine." The evening was a success and more than one commentator has surmised that Faulkner was probably more pleased and honored to be made an officer of the Légion d'Honneur that to have been awarded the Nobel Prize or any of his other many awards. Republique Francaise hardcover
194212382New York: Random House 1942. Limited Edition. Cloth. Very good. Signed limited edition of Go Down Moses and Other Stories by William Faulkner. Octavo 10 383pp. Three-quarter orange buckram paper covered boards top edge gilt title in gilt on spine. Stated "First Printing" on copyright page. Solid text block light wear to fore edge of text block. Archival repairs to spine and board edges tears on pages 285-288 repaired with Japanese tissue. Peterson A23.2a From a limited edition of 100 copies signed by William Faulkner this being number 55. The smallest limitation of any Faulkner signed works. A scarce example. Peterson A23.2a. William Faulkner 1897-1962 was an award-winning author with stories focusing on the American South. His work won the Nobel Prize in Literature and two Pulitzer Prizes for Fiction. A few specific pieces most notably The Sound and the Fury are considered to be in the top 100 best English-language novels of the 20th century. The title Go Down Moses and Other Stories was shortened to Go Down Moses in later editions. Random House unknown
193218444ENew York: Smith & Haas 1932. First Edition First Printing. From the library of film director Tod Browning with his signature in pencil to the front pastedown. Very good lightly used copy with a trace of edge wear a faint 1/3†spot to the cloth at the front board and slight edge wear in a very good bright dust jacket with a few tiny nicks and tears with two tears skillfully internally mended by an expert paper conservationist. At this time during the Great Depression Faulkner was attempting to break into Hollywood screenwriting as his income from his novels and stories provided very little. Tod Browning was Lon Chaney Sr.’s most noted director during the silent era specializing in strange and atmospheric crime films and pictures with elements of horror. With the coming of sound Browning directed Bela Lugosi in the original 1931 Dracula and at MGM he directed his 1932 masterpiece Freaks. Smith & Haas hardcover
1933D1994London: Chatto and Windus 1933. Hardcover. Fine/Very Good. Original blue cloth gilt-stamped lettering on spine. Inscribed by Faulkner on the title-page to Else Faulkner's liaison when he visited Stockholm to collect the Nobel prize. Book is fine in a very nice example of the scarce dustwrapper price-clipped scuffed along the edges. <br/><br/>Faulkner met Else Jonsson 1912-1996 when he visited Stockholm in December 1950 to receive the Nobel Prize. Else was the widow of journalist Thorsten Jonsson 19101950 reporter for "Dagens Nyheter" in New York from 1943 to 1946 who had interviewed Faulkner in 1946 and introduced his works to Swedish readers. At the banquet in 1950 where Faulkner and Else met publisher Tor Bonnier referred to Else as widow of the man responsible for Faulkner being awarded the prize. They had an affair that lasted until the end of 1953. Chatto and Windus hardcover
19592373830/11/1959. <blockquote><p>It is dated 1959; we have found no later letter of Faulkner having reached the market</p><p>William Faulkner is among the greatest American writers of the 20th century and a Nobel Prize winner. Perhaps his most well known work is ""The Sound and the Fury"".</p></blockquote><p>By the time he was a teenager Faulkner was an accomplished hunter and was already displaying some of the characteristics that would mark him as a hunter for the rest of his life. He was also an avid lover of horses.</p><p>The “big woods†as he called them offered Faulkner an escape from the pressures of his art a turbid personal life and at least late in his life fame. But the hunt and the wilderness were more than just an escape for Faulkner; they were also an inspiration for some of his greatest literary works.</p><p>In late October Faulkner and his wife Estelle settled into their recently purchased Georgian brick house on Rugby Road in Charlottesville VA where they stayed till New Years. He would hunt enjoy his time outdoors write and take care of his horse. In his biography of Faulkner Joseph Blotter wrote of Faulkner ""Outdoors in the golden fall weather he was consistently working with Powerhouse a tremendous big strong hunter.""</p><p>On November 13 ""The Mansion"" the last of a trilogy on the unscrupulous Snopes family was published.</p><p>In this letter Faulkner announces his arrival in Virginia to his mother discusses fox hunting with his horse Powerhouse and refers to ""all three"" meaning himself Estelle and his only daughter Jill. John likely refers to Johnny his brother. Tiger Lily is almost certainly another pet.</p><p><strong>Autograph letter signed</strong> <em>""Billy""</em> November 30 1959 from Virginia to his mother Maud in Oxford MS the envelope still present written in his hand.</p><p><em>""Here we all three are 5 counting 'Power House' and 'Tiger Lily.' Dear we expect you and Jon to come on up here when you go to N. Carolina. All well here. Weather not too cold yet. I go fox hunting every other day every day when some friend can spare a horse since a hunter has to have one day of rest between hunts.""</em></p><p>ALSs of Faulkner are not common. We found only a handful stretching back decades.</p><p><img class=""alignnone wp-image-23729 size-post-window"" src=""https://cdn.raabcollection.com/wp-content/uploads/20231204152429/Folder-site-7-1600x1327.jpg"" alt="""" width=""1600"" height=""1327"" /></p> unknown
1930140947812New York: Jonathan Cape & Harrison Smith 1930. First Edition. Near Fine/Near Fine. First edition first printing first issue text with "I" misaligned on page 11. vi 254 pp. Bound in publisher's beige cloth lettered in brown red topstain. Near Fine with darkening to cloth at joints and trivial wear. In a Near Fine price-clipped dust jacket with light edgewear and soiling tanned spine panel small stain to bottom of rear panel and minimal worming to lower edge of spine and rear panel. A beautiful copy with firm binding. Jonathan Cape & Harrison Smith unknown
1932149881New York: Harrison Smith & Robert Haas 1932. First edition first issue with first printing statement on copyright page and “Jefferson†for “Mottstown†on page 340 line 1; first-issue binding lettered in blue and orange. Octavo original cloth. Fine in a near fine dust jacket with the rare original glassine. Petersen A13a; Howard A13.1a; Massey 103. Housed in a custom clamshell box. An exceptional example. One of William Faulkners most admired and accessible novels Light in August reveals the great American author at the height of his powers. Lena Groves resolute search for the father of her unborn child begets a rich poignant and ultimately hopeful story of perseverance in the face of mortality. It also acquaints us with several of Faulkners most unforgettable characters including the Reverend Gail Hightower plagued by visions of Confederate horsemen and Joe Christmas a ragged itinerant soul obsessed with his mixed-race ancestry. Powerfully entwining these characters stories Light in August brings to life Faulkners imaginary South one of literatures great invented landscapes in all of its unerringly fascinating glory. "No man ever put more of his heart and soul into the written word than did William Faulkner. If you want to know all you can about that heart and soul the fiction where he put it is still right there" Eudora Welty. Harrison Smith & Robert Haas hardcover
1929478 - 713 - 932<p><em>First printing of Faulkner's magnum opus in the first state of the dust jacket</em></p><p><strong>Publisher and Year</strong>: New York: Jonathan Cape and Harrison Smith 1929</p><p><strong>Edition</strong>: First edition first printing "First Published 1929" with no statement of reprint one of just 1789 copies. First-state dust jacket with <em>Humanity Uprooted</em> priced $3.00 on the rear panel incremented to $3.50 in the second state. Petersen A6.1; Meriwether 1962.</p><p><strong>Condition and Description</strong>: Octavo publisher's original art deco boards with matching endpapers spine lettered in black 401 pp. Modest toning to the boards; light foxing to the spine; wear to the edges mainly to the bottom edge. Rear board with a localized patch of discoloration consistent with printer's ink set-off during production of the book. Bookstore stamp to the front free endpaper "The Book Shop / 136 Park Place / Johnstown - PA" with light offsetting to the pastedown. Clean pages otherwise with no writing underlining or prior owner markings. The dust jacket shows rubbing to the surface; significant fading to the spine as usual; toning to a strip of the fore-edge and bottom edge of the front panel; closed tears to the edges sealed on the blindside with tape; and light creasing and a little loss to the tips and extremities. An attractive example of one of the most influential novels and one of the most iconic dust jackets of the twentieth century.</p><p><em>".I give you the mausoleum of all hope and desire.I give it to you not that you may remember time but that you might forget it now and then for a moment ." </em> Ranked #6 on the Modern Library's list of the 100 greatest novels of the 20th century <em>The Sound and the Fury</em> is widely considered Faulkner's finest work and a defining achievement in American modernism. Its formal experimentation and psychological depth secured its inclusion in TIME Magazine's All-Time 100 Novels and The Guardian's list of the 100 best novels written in English cementing its reputation as one of the most influential novels ever published.</p><p>Inventory ID: 478 - 713 - 932</p> Jonathan Cape and Harrison Smith
19204386Oxford Mississippi 1920. First edition. Embossed sheep over card stamped in gilt to front board. Marbled endpapers. A bit of rubbing and shelfwear to covers; spine cracked and several signatures loose but in all holding well. Ownership stamp to front pastedown. Internally a pleasing example with minimal wear and no marking. A Fine copy of this scarce piece which does not appear in the auction record and of which there is no other example on the market; the present yearbook contains Faulkner's first literary appearance in book form his poem To a Co-Ed page 174.<br /> <br /> "The Ole Miss annuals have a particularly treasurable quality about them; they breathe with the life of Faulkner's first creativity.which annuals to collect may seem a question of some complexity when all the choices are considered" Petersen. After all they show a young man engaging with peers imagining a career in art and testing out new facets to his identity. But the 1919-1920 annual stands out. To a Co-Ed was "his first literary appearance and his second published poem" Petersen. In it one gets a sense of the canon Faulkner learned during his time as a student -- references to major figures from the Iliad and the Divine Comedy abound. And while he has not yet tapped into the stream-of-consciousness that would mark his mature style such allusions would appear in these adult works repackaged and reimagined in the South. While original works by Faulkner would appear in later yearbooks the present is a landmark first.<br /> <br /> In addition to Faulkner's verse the yearbook allows a glimpse into his active campus life. He contributes drawings that appear on pages 20 105 145 155 and 157. He appears in the membership photographs for the Ole Miss staff and with the local American Legion post. Under the name Count William Falkner sic his name is listed in the membership of the Freshman Literary Class as well as under William Faulkner as a Special Student. <br /> <br /> Cofield 55. Daniel 19. Massey 75. Petersen 17. unknown