Reading Introductions to the First Thirteen Novels is a collection of lectures by Harvard University professor and nationally known novelist and biographer Richard Marius. Marius had been charged with the task of teaching an introductory course on Faulkner to undergraduates in 1996 and 1997. Combining his love of Faulkner's writing with his own experiences as an author and teacher, Marius produced a series of delightful lectures-which stand on their own as sparkling, well-rounded essays-that help beginning students in understanding the sometimes difficult work of this celebrated literary master. Reading Faulkner is perfect for students from high school through the undergraduate level and will be enjoyed by general readers as well. Richard Marius (1933-1999) taught at the University of Tennessee before heading Harvard's expository writing program from 1978 to 1998. He was the author of Thomas More, Martin The Christian between God and Death, and four novels about his native East Tennessee. Nancy Grisham Anderson is an associate professor of English at Auburn University, Montgomery. She is the author of The Writer's A Reader for Composition and the editor of They Call Me A Courtship in Letters, and Wrestling with The Meditations of Richard Marius. She was a longtime friend of Richard Marius.
Richard Curry Marius was an American academic and writer.
He was a scholar of the Reformation, novelist of the American South, speechwriter, and teacher of writing and English literature at Harvard University. He was widely published, leaving behind major biographies of Thomas More and Martin Luther, four novels set in his native Tennessee, several books on writing, and a host of scholarly articles for academic journals and mainstream book reviews.
Marius was known as a raconteur and political activist.
Southern writer Richard Marius was assigned by Harvard to teach Faulkner, much to his disappointment -- I think he wanted to teach English poetry or French philosophy or something. This book consists of his lectures on each of the first 13 novels, through Go Down, Moses; plus two or three more on major recurring topics such as race and mythology. They are terrific ruminations and discussions on each book. He has his own particular points of view on some subjects, from modernism to religion, and that does affect his "reviews" of the novels. But he is respectful, even of the worst (like Mosquitoes and Sanctuary) and he managed to make me want to reread Pylon, usually considered another stinker. He only taught the course a couple years, but it became extremely popular, and it is quite evident why. His look at what he thought Faulkner was doing is insightful and generous and Marius is not afraid to say when he doesn't have a clue about a motivation or a meaning. A great way to revisit and refresh yourself on the single greatest oeuvre in American literature.