Phil Stone of Oxford
A Vicarious Life
Format:Paperback
Publisher:University of Georgia Press
Published:1st Nov '08
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
William Faulkner is Phil Stone's contribution to American literature, once remarked a mutual confidant of the Nobel laureate and the Oxford, Mississippi, attorney. Despite his friendship with the writer for nearly fifty years, Stone is generally regarded as a minor figure in Faulkner studies. In her biography Phil Stone of Oxford, Susan Snell offers the first complete critical assessment of Stone's role in the transformation of Billy Falkner, a promising but directionless young man, into William Faulkner, arguably the greatest American novelist of the twentieth century.
In the first decades of their friendship, Stone served Faulkner in many ways—as mentor, muse, patron, editor, agent, and publicist. Later, Stone was among Faulkner's first biographers and was a source of archival, biographical, and critical information for such Faulkner scholars as James B. Meriwether and Carvel Collins.
Ironically, the most intriguing aspect of Stone's relationship with Faulkner has until now been the least studied. Stone was one of Faulkner's principal character studies, and from his life came the raw material out of which Faulkner constructed a good part of his fictional Yoknapatawpha County. Stone's Ivy League education, his friendships with gamblers and prostitutes, his family's hunting excursions, even his family's antebellum mansion only begin to suggest the borrowings from Stone's life found in books ranging from The Sound and the Fury and Go Down, Moses to the Snopes trilogy.
Faulkner also appropriated Stone's personality and profession to mirror—and sometimes mask—his own insecurities. Such characters as Quentin Compson, Darl Bundren, Horace Benbow, and Gavin Stevens owe much to the author himself but also recall Stone in often subtle ways.
The fraternal rivalries for their mother's love that consume Darl Bundren and Quentin Compson, for example, are based on Stone's own unhappy family life. Bundren's and Compson's mothers more closely resemble Stone's mother than Faulkner's.
In Stone, Faulkner saw the Old South confronting its twentieth-century crucibles—the teeming, rapacious white lower classes; the Great Depression; and the first stirrings of the civil rights and women's movements. In the 1930s, Faulkner recurrently dealt with the region's decadence and the fall of old patriarchies like the Compson and Sartoris families. During these years, Faulkner's fortunes rose steadily as Stone's declined, but it is Stone's story—not his own—that he...
Ms. Snell enters day by day and week by week Faulkner's old hometown and that largely vanished South, and she records them more fully than any Faulkner biography has done. . . . Phil Stone can thus be read not simply as a biography of a minor character, but as a meditation on life and art and the curious interchanges by which the two become one.
Useful and entertaining . . . A sympathetic biography of a complex, popular small-town lawyer, a life worth reading.
[Snell] makes the Oxford, Miss., of both men's childhood and young truly alive and intelligible. Stone's biographer can tell a tale: in depicting and explaining the community's economic ups and downs, its political and family intrigues, in recreating the back-porch gossip of Phil's and Bill's small university town and surrounding territory, and describing how in that idyllic summer before the Great War, Bill, Phil and the 'gang' that hung around the Carters and the Oldhams 'practiced idleness together,' she makes the actual as real as Faulkner's fiction.
A first-rate biography of a key person in William Faulkner's life.
ISBN: 9780820333663
Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 24mm
Weight: 907g
432 pages