Julian Barnes recommended Stoner in a piece in the Guardian as the "must read book of 2013." This novel by John Williams (who?) was first published in 1965 and was a candidate for disappearance until it became a success in France in a translation by Anna Gavalda. Barnes gives an account of the book's second life as an international phenomenon.
The day before yesterday, I started reading Stoner. I'm only a hundred pages in (a third of the way into the book), and my impression is that William Stoner, the titular character, has led an isolated life. The University which was his escape from farm life became another trap or asylum. Up to this point in the book, I've seen very little of Stoner's life in the academy. Perhaps English department politics will become the subject of the latter part of the book? Stoner's marriage to Edith is tragic. He's a modern man though, or before his time — he takes responsibility for the care and rearing of his daughter while Edith suffers from an illness which looks to me like depression.
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