Light in August

novel by Faulkner
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Light in August, novel by William Faulkner, published in 1932, the seventh in the series set in the fictional Yoknapatawpha county, Miss., U.S.

The central figure of Light in August is the orphan Joe Christmas, whose mixed blood condemns him to life as an outsider, hated or pitied. Joe is frequently whipped by Simon McEachern, the puritanical farmer who raises him, and, after savagely beating his adoptive father, Joe leaves home when he is 18. He then wanders for 15 years, eventually moving in with Joanna Burden, a white woman devoted to helping blacks. Her evangelism comes to remind Joe of Simon’s, and he murders her. Betrayed by his companion Lucas Burch, Joe is hunted down, killed, and castrated.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Kathleen Kuiper.