<p>William Faulkner seems to have sprung a full-blown genius from a remote part of the American South. Yet Faulkner spent much of his life striving to emulate and overshadow - both as a writer and as a person - his great-grandfather and namesake Colonel William Falkner a dueling railroad-building soldiering figure who loomed not just as a legend in Faulkner&#39;s family and community but also as a literary forebear a published novelist travel writer and poet. Looking back on his career Faulkner would mention that early on he had ridden his great-grandfather&#39;s coattails but by the mid-twentieth century it was clear that it was the great-grandson who was leading the literary world: readers young writers of fiction and literary critics were following &lt;I&gt;him&lt;/I&gt; as one who had found extraordinary ways to capture and express the most challenging aspects of modern life. Taylor Hagood&#39;s book centers on the concept of following to examine how Faulkner&#39;s work has been analyzed elucidated and promoted by a massive body of scholarly work spanning over seven decades. It narrates the development of Faulkner criticism taking as its premise the idea that Faulkner forges a fiery path through modernism and into postmodernism that literary critics have been constantly rushing to follow.</p>
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