What are some of your favorite novels that use a stream-of-consciousness prose?
>>7364638
The Sound and the Fury is my favorite soc Faulkner
Ulysses
The Waves and To the Lighthouse
Zeno's Conscience has some soc moments
Tropic of Capricorn
>>7364665
I came here to say The Sound and the Fury myself.
The Sun Also Rises would probably be a runner up for me, as would Child of God and One Hundred Years of Solitude.
>>7364665
>The Sound and the Fury is my favorite soc Faulkner
Good to know I'm not the only one :)
>>7364638
Portrait of the Artist as A Young Man
>>7364720
>the sun also rises
>stream of consciousness
What?
The first time I really noticed it was in Last Exit To Brooklyn, and I loved that book. He uses the style perfectly in my opinion.
Absalom, Absalom! and To The Lighthouse
>>7364638
>wibberly wobberly
Can you give me an example of stream-of-consciousness prose?
>>7365532
just read this
a little hard to follow at times, but that's from my very limited previous reading
great stuff
great drunk reading
>>7364720
>The Sun Also Rises
>Stream of Consciousness
Now I know you have no idea what that term means.
I just read The Waves and it's one of the best books I've ever read, is Faulkner similar?
>>7365537
not him but bumping, wtf is it bros?
>>7364665
Mysteries - Knut Hamsun
>>7364720
>Sun Also...
>100 years...
c'mon son.
>>7365864
Just like you, apparently.
>noone mentions Garcia Marquez's autumn of the patriarch
>>7367428
thats the ugliest resolution/browser/taskbar set up i've seen on 4chan that isn't a joke in a long time.
>>7365864
Well in that case every Stephen King novel is soc. Writing as you go doesn't mean there's not heavy editing and re-writing. Soc has minor or no editing and the writing is done fluidly
>>7364665
>The Sound and the Fury
This.
>>7365532
One of the only stream of consciousness books I like.