As one might expect from a story about the Faulkners, “Every Day by the Sun” features plenty of high jinks involving booze and women. Yet Wells insists, “I never saw William Faulkner drunk.” There are beguiling tales about Faulkner’s struggle toward literary stardom — his days as a bitter postal worker who discarded any mail not sent first class and his efforts to write “As I Lay Dying” while working the night shift at a power plant. “William wrote on the back of a wheelbarrow he had turned upside down,” Wells reports.
Much of this may not be news to Faulkner scholars and aficionados. But Wells’s personalized rendition brings a warmth to the lore. In her telling, Faulkner is less a literary icon than a quirky uncle who took her sailing, escorted her trick-or-treating, showed her how to clean a gun, and drove her to and from school. When Wells was a Pee Wee football cheerleader, Faulkner even stayed to watch the games, sitting in the same seat, wearing his signature hat. Wells says “Every Day by the Sun” is a kind of thank-you note to her uncle — who, in taking care of her, “had fulfilled his promise to my father” — but it is also a testament to her own gifts as a writer.
From our previous reviews
David Baldacci praisedRawhide Down (Picador, $16), a detailed account of the attempted assassination of Ronald Reagan and its aftermath, by Washington Post reporter Del Quentin Wilber. “The chapters that detail the assassination attempt and its immediate aftermath read like a thriller,” Baldacci wrote.
Narrated by a loquacious chimpanzee, Benjamin Hale’s The Evolution of Bruno Littlemore (Twelve, $14.99) is “a funny, sad and shocking tale of a stranger in our strange world, a place brought to account by an animal ashamed and proud of his own humanity,” according to Ron Charles.
Michael Dirda called Laura Snyder’s The Philosophical Breakfast Club (Broadway, $16) “an example of popular intellectual history at its near best.” The book examines the lives and work of a group of influential 19th-century British scientists, including the computer inventor who “helped bring about the transformation of science from a hobby into a profession.”
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