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' This is an assured and highly original study of one of William Faulkner' s most neglected works. Exposing the nineteenth-century chess master from New Orleans Paul Morphy as a key source of inspiration for Faulkner' s conception of Gavin Stevens, Wainwright argues successfully for a reassessment of ' Knight' s Gambit' as a key text in our understanding of the novelist' s personal accommodation of postmodernism. At the same time, he provides a range of historically and theoretically informed insights into the engagement of twentieth-century literature with structuralist and poststructuralist thinking as well into as the psychology of chess as a game. My hat goes off to him. ' David Rogers, Head of School of Humanities, Kingston University
' This study fills a critical absence in Faulkner studies and brings to that gap a fresh, innovative, and verifiable approach . . . Wainwright enters entirely new territory with this study . . . I recommend it highly. ' - Joseph Urgo, Professor of English and President, St. Mary' s College of Maryland
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