Book cover of As I Lay Dying

Book description

The death and burial of Addie Bundren is told by members of her family, as they cart the coffin to Jefferson, Mississippi, to bury her among her people. And as the intense desires, fears and rivalries of the family are revealed in the vernacular of the Deep South, Faulkner presents…

When you buy books, we may earn a commission that helps keep our lights on (or join the rebellion as a member).

Why read it?

4 authors picked As I Lay Dying as one of their favorite books. Why do they recommend it?

This is my book's protagonist's favorite book.

The Bundren family sets out across Mississippi to honor their dying matriarch's wish to be buried in her hometown, and nearly everything that can go wrong does. The ending is uneasy rather than truly resolved, and the landscape itself is a main character: it floods and burns and resists the Bundrens throughout.

Faulkner understood something crucial about the South, and Southerners by extension: it will not cooperate, and the people who love it regardless are complicated and oftentimes their own worst enemies.

I have been pressing this book into people’s hands since I…

From A. M.'s list on the truth about the American South.

I always try to find reasons to read William Faulkner’s As I Lay Dying, the painfully sad story of a family hauling their mother’s body to her hometown in order to bury her. Addie Bundren’s life has been sad and dreary, but the path to her resting place is even more so, replete with flood and fire, as well as a post-death monologue that contains one of the most psychologically complete rationalizations in literary history. Every time I read this book, I understand each of the Bundren family members more deeply, and have greater sympathy for the yoke their…

From Susan's list on that only get better with time.

A classic, and perhaps too much so. Many scholars of Faulkner believe there are other, greater titles in his career that should stand as his seminal work. However, this is the first of his novels that I read, and so perhaps had the advantage when it came to leaving an impression. Again, the multi-faceted storytelling is most impressive, as are the not-so-subtle themes of death and religion. Bonus points for the shortest chapter in literary history: My mother is a fish.

From James' list on Southern novels with prose.

If you love As I Lay Dying...

Book cover of Plow

Plow by Saz Keukan,

Patrick, a married man in his early thirties with a white-collar job as his identity and alcohol as his salve, works himself to the bone, breaks down, and goes to Vegas with his friends - fellow hedonists under thin corporate veneers - to recoup his debts through blackjack. The weekend…

Addie Bundren, the matriarch of the family, is the ghost that haunts this narrative. While she is largely absent save her marked presence in the title, her death and the transportation of her body form the arc of the book, and she arrives in the narrative in the later sections to tell her story. She asserts that her father had told her "the reason for living was to get ready to stay dead a long time," and it's true that her life does not seem remarkably different from her death. Her bitterness remains, and her narrative voice does not differ…

From Sadie's list on narrated by ghosts.

If you love As I Lay Dying...

Book cover of Plow

Plow by Saz Keukan,

Patrick, a married man in his early thirties with a white-collar job as his identity and alcohol as his salve, works himself to the bone, breaks down, and goes to Vegas with his friends - fellow hedonists under thin corporate veneers - to recoup his debts through blackjack. The weekend…

Want books like As I Lay Dying?

Our community of 12,000+ authors has personally recommended 100 books like As I Lay Dying.

Browse books like As I Lay Dying

Book cover of Moby-Dick
Book cover of Lincoln in the Bardo
Book cover of The Complete Stories

Share your top 3 reads of 2025!

And get a beautiful page showing off your 3 favorite reads.

1,340

readers submitted
so far, will you?