William Faulkner, "Light in August," Moscow: AST, 2017

Nobel Prize winner William Faulkner is considered a key author of Southern Gothic. A model novel in this regard, "Light in August," despite its modernist complexity, is a good introduction to his work. Unlike Faulkner's most famous novel, "The Sound and the Fury," the plot lines here don't diverge significantly, and the narrators communicate clearly. Published in 1932, "Light in August" is also a novel about journey and search: for a loved one, for oneself, for one's place in the world, for one's identity. Dark, atmospheric, and allegorical, it largely defines the canon of a genre that has proven unexpectedly relevant even today.
"Он кричал, что имеет право убить нигера. Почему – не сказал, до того распалился и ополоумел, что говорить не мог толком".

