Sanctuary

novel by Faulkner
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Sanctuary, novel by William Faulkner, published in 1931. The book’s depictions of degraded sexuality generated both controversy and spectacular sales, making it the author’s only popular success during his lifetime. A vision of a decayed South, the novel pitted idealistic lawyer Horace Benbow against a cast of amoral fiends. The book’s seething violence and despair were characteristic of Faulkner, although elsewhere less brutally displayed.

Faulkner’s publisher balked at releasing this study of human evil, set in the author’s fictional Yoknapatawpha county, Mississippi, and asked him to rewrite it in proof. Faulkner did so, refining its art without softening its horror.

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