![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Faulkner’s success as a writer was mixed during his lifetime. He married Estelle Oldham in 1929, the same year he began writing one of his most famous works, As I Lay Dying. He moved to New Orleans and published his first novel, Soldier’s Pay, in 1926. He attended the University of Mississippi but did not do well and dropped out after three semesters. (Indeed, Faulkner was actually born “Falkner,” but changed his name after a typesetter misspelled it and Faulkner decided to go along with it.) Faulkner began writing in his teens, although he at first found it difficult to get his work published. He was named after his grandfather, a Civil War hero named William Clark Falkner. He received a thorough education at home from both his mother and his nanny, Canny Barr, and was an excellent student at school. William Faulkner was one of four brothers who grew up in Oxford, Mississippi. ![]()
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