Not exact matches
The success possible to Faulkner's «extraordinary art» is that, in describing «our suffocation and a world dying of
old age» (LPE 87) he communicates his own existential attitude
toward it: the self the
reader may apprehend is Faulkner, freely choosing to be a determinist.
Yes, there are some Klan apologist passages that made this modern
reader cringe, and it's not 100 % clear whether Mitchell thinks the
Old South was too perfect to last or too untethered to reality to last, although the mindset of her heroine makes me think she leaned
toward the latter.
But it looks like
reader preferences are shifting
toward ebooks; assuming that trend keeps up, that's saying the same thing, we'll help you find information and recreational reading that we pay for for you, you don't need to pay for it individually — but only on
old crusty print that you don't actually want.
But we see a number of
older readers now gravitating
toward e-books as well, even though one advantage of them is that you can change the size of the type.