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Go Down Moses And Other Stories
Go Down Moses And Other Stories
Jun 15, 2025 11:41 PM

Author:William Faulkner

Go Down Moses And Other Stories

Seven dramatic stories which reveal Faulkner's compassionate understanding of the Deep South. His characters are humble people who live out their lives within the same small circle of the earth, who die unrecorded. Their epitaphs make a fitting introduction to one of the great American writers of the century.

Reviews

What makes Petterson’s storytelling so mesmerising is his measured, gentle restraint

—— Scotland on Sunday

Written with humour and great clarity, it’s a short but strikingly memorable read

—— A Life in Books

A small book that packs a punch

—— Michael North , Independent on Sunday

Shot through with a tender, nostalgic quality

—— David Evans , Financial Times

This debut outing (from 1987) by the Norwegian novelist tells a tale of childhood c.1960 with tender, bittersweet poignancy

—— Boyd Tonkin , Independent

If you loved Out Stealing Horses, you won’t be disappointed by his razor-sharp debut, which tells the story of Arvid’s childhood … The language is simple, beautiful and cleansed of literary affectation. There is not a single superfluous word

—— Ekstrabladet (Denmark)

These father-son stories bring us the first meeting with one of Nordic literature’s most lovable characters, Arvid Jansen. A mixture of Alfons Åberg, Ingemar from My Life as a Dog and in part Oskar from The Tin Drum ... New readers should begin nowhere but here

—— Euroman (Denmark)

There is both humour and tenderness in Per Petterson’s debut collection from 1987 … Petterson masters the art of writing simply of big subjects. As a reader, you have to read slowly and attentively to register everything, or read the book twice, which you gladly will

—— Kristeligt Dagblad (Norway)

If you loved Out Stealing Horses, you won’t be disappointed by his razor-sharp debut… The language is simple, beautiful and cleansed of literary affectation. There is not a single superfluous word

—— Ekstrabladet (Denmark)

There is both humour and tenderness… Petterson masters the art of writing simply of big subjects. As a reader, you have to read slowly and attentively to register everything, or read the book twice, which you gladly will

—— Kristeligt Dagblad (Norway)

Dreamy and evanescent, [the stories] recall the opening pages of James Joyce’s A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man

—— Jon Michaud , Washington Post
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