


The river, the buzzards, the town, the barn…each episode presented from two or more startlingly different, and yet equally twisted points of view…until at the end the whole mystery of what is going on is revealed (or is it?). But one thing follows another and before long, you find yourself witnessing a family being torn apart in a most gruesome way. This decision does not, at first, seem as fateful as it turns out to be. At least one of their sons is developmentally disabled, and at least one of their other sons is mentally ill, and their daughter is an infuriatingly stupid, pretty thing who is trying to figure out what to do about the bun in her oven, and their father is the most pitiful slimeball who ever wore false teeth, and the mother is so vindictive that even death doesn’t stop her from saying nasty things about her family.Īfter Ma Bundren dies, the family decides to pack her up in a coffin, load it onto a wagon, and take it back to Ma’s hometown for burial. The Bundrens are, to be quite charitable, poor white trash in the early 20th-century state of Mississippi.

The psychos are the Bundren family, who appear in various stories and novels by Faulkner. I think the correct literary word for it would be psychodrama. It gets into the head of each of its characters in turn and boy, are they a bunch of psychos! It is really a fascinating book - one that blurs the line between ultra-realistic serious literature, and off-the-wall fantasy. But after that, I read it many times on my own initiative. This is another book that I would never have read if it hadn’t been assigned to me by a teacher.
