![]() Rosa’s description of Sutpen is dark and foreboding, describing him consistently as a devil or demon. He established a thriving plantation there and seemed poised for wealth and influence. Sutpen arrived in the area in the 1830s and acquired the land on which Sutpen’s Hundred was built through devious and possibly illegal means. The story opens on the night before Quentin is to depart for Harvard he is summoned to the dark, hot home of family friend Rosa Coldfield, who tells him her version of the story of her brother-in-law, Thomas Sutpen. ![]() ![]() In his novel Absalom, Absalom (1936), William Faulkner traces the rise and fall of antebellum Southern culture by following the life story of a single man, using a mixture of equally unreliable narrators. ![]()
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