William Styron Books In Order
Book links take you to Amazon. As an Amazon Associate I earn money from qualifying purchases.Publication Order of Standalone Novels
The Confessions of Nat Turner | (1951) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
Lie Down in Darkness | (1951) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
The Long March | (1952) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
Set This House On Fire | (1960) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
Sophie's Choice | (1979) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
Shadrach | (1979) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
Inheritance of Night | (1980) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
Mr Jefferson and our times | (1984) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
Publication Order of Plays
In the Clap Shack | (1973) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
Publication Order of Collections
This Quiet Dust: And Other Writings | (1982) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
A Tidewater Morning | (1993) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
The Long March and In the Clap Shack | (1993) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
The Suicide Run: Five Tales of the Marine Corps | (2009) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
Publication Order of Non-Fiction Books
Darkness Visible | (1990) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
Fathers and Daughters | (1994) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
Havanas in Camelot | (2008) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
Letters to My Father | (2009) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
Selected Letters of William Styron | (2012) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
My Generation | (2015) | Description / Buy at Amazon |
Publication Order of Literary Conversations Books
Conversations with Jorge Luis Borges | (1969) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Czeslaw Milosz | (1981) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Graham Greene | (1983) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Eudora Welty | (1985) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Walker Percy | (1985) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations With Isaac Bashevis Singer | (1985) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with William Styron | (1985) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Malcolm Cowley | (1986) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Lillian Hellman | (1986) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Tennessee Williams | (1986) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Ernest Hemingway | (1986) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Katherine Anne Porter | (1987) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Truman Capote: Conversations | (1987) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Flannery O'Connor | (1987) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Peter Taylor | (1987) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Arthur Miller | (1987) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Edward Albee | (1988) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Erskine Caldwell | (1988) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Norman Mailer | (1988) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Kurt Vonnegut | (1988) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Robert Graves | (1989) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Joyce Carol Oates | (1989) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Shelby Foote | (1989) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Robertson Davies | (1989) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with James Baldwin | (1989) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with John Gardner | (1990) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Richard Wilbur | (1990) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Tom Wolfe | (1990) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Raymond Carver | (1990) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Eugene O'Neill | (1990) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Reynolds Price | (1991) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Bernard Malamud | (1991) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Elizabeth Spencer | (1991) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Nikki Giovanni | (1992) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations With Thornton Wilder | (1992) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Robert Coles | (1992) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with M. F. K. Fisher | (1992) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
More Conversations with Walker Percy | (1993) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Richard Wright | (1993) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Paul Bowles | (1993) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Louise Erdrich and Michael Dorris | (1994) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Amiri Baraka | (1994) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Toni Morrison | (1994) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Saul Bellow | (1994) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Henry Miller | (1994) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Ernest Gaines | (1995) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Ralph Ellison | (1995) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Chester Himes | (1995) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Susan Sontag | (1995) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Ishmael Reed | (1995) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Derek Walcott | (1996) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
More Conversations with Eudora Welty | (1996) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Elizabeth Bishop | (1996) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Pauline Kael | (1996) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with V. S. Naipaul | (1997) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with N. Scott Momaday | (1997) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Chinua Achebe | (1997) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Maxine Hong Kingston | (1998) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Denise Levertov | (1998) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations With William Faulkner | (1999) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with E. L. Doctorow | (1999) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations With John Fowles | (1999) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Salman Rushdie | (2000) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with William S. Burroughs | (2000) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Leslie Marmon Silko | (2000) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Chaim Potok | (2001) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Richard Ford | (2001) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Christopher Isherwood | (2001) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Mary Gordon | (2002) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Jim Harrison | (2002) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Clarence Major | (2002) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Margaret Walker | (2002) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Erica Jong | (2002) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Elie Wiesel: Conversations | (2002) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Joseph Brodsky: Conversations | (2003) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Rita Dove | (2003) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with F. Scott Fitzgerald | (2003) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Gwendolyn Brooks | (2003) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Stanley Kaufmann | (2003) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Gloria Naylor | (2004) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Audre Lorde | (2004) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Ray Bradbury | (2004) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations With John le Carré | (2004) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Isaac Asimov | (2005) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Don DeLillo | (2005) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Gore Vidal | (2005) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Robert Penn Warren | (2005) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Jack Kerouac | (2005) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Gabriel García Márquez | (2005) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Thomas McGuane | (2006) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Larry Brown | (2007) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Sonia Sanchez | (2007) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Wendell Berry | (2007) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Leon Forrest | (2007) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Conversations with Kazuo Ishiguro | (2008) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
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Publication Order of Short Story Anthologies
San Francisco Stories | (1990) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Los Angeles Stories | (1991) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
On Suicide: Great Writers on the Ultimate Question | (1992) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
New Orleans Stories | (1992) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Chicago Stories | (1993) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Southwest Stories | (1993) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Florida Stories | (1993) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Lust: Lascivious Love Stories and Passionate Poems | (1994) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Alaska Stories | (1995) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Texas Stories | (1995) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
San Francisco Thrillers | (1995) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
Cape Cod Stories | (2002) | Description / Buy at Amazon | ||
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OOB: Anthology series. The author will have written at least one story in this series. |
Publication Order of Anthologies
William Styron is a bestselling author of literary fiction that was best known for his controversial novel “The Confessions of Nat Turner.”
The author was born in Newport News in 1925, as the only child of shipyard engineer William ClarkStyron. His father had deep roots in the south and in fact, his mother was the owner of some slaves when she was just a child.
His mother was Paulin Styron who came from very early immigrants to Pennsylvania. William had a very idyllic childhood as he was loved by his family and spent much of his time reading.
During this time, he used to explore the waterfront and several interesting places in Newport News and made all manner of friends. In 1940, his parents sent him to a small preparatory in Virginia from where he graduated in 1942.
The Second World War would significantly shape his college life, as he started at the conservative Christian school at Davidson College, soon after getting into the reserve officer training program with the Marines.
However, since he did not like the school’s strict academic and religious standards he soon transferred to Duke. He would then join active duty in 1944 and by December 1945, he was discharged having risen to the rank of second lieutenant.
In the Fall, William Styron went back to Duke, where he reconnected with his writing mentor Professor Willaim Blackburn. By 1947, he graduated even as he had developed a disdain for literary criticism as he was determined to become an author.
Styron would then move to New York which he believed had a more congenial intellectual life. After he was done writing “Lie Down in Darkness,” he rejoined the Marines in 1951.
Following his win of the Prix de Rome prize which granted him 12 months of paid residency at the Rome-based American Academy, he spent much of his summer in Paris.
The interlude gave him much time to do other things including founding “The Paris Review.” It was from this organization that he made many lifelong friends with the literary community in the city.
Some of the people that he met during this time include Irwin Shaw, George Plimpton, and Peter Matthiessen. The interlude also gave him much-needed time that he used to pen “The Long March.”
His residency in Rome would provide much of the material that he would then put to use in the writing of “Set This House on Fire.” It was also in Rome that he met Rose Burgunder, who would, later on, become his wife.
When William Styron and Rose his new life settled and began raising a family in their farmhouse in Connecticut, he finally had the ideal life of an aspiring writer.
He was sociable yet protected, and productive yet relaxed, which provided a lot of order and regularity that made it easier to write.
He used to sleep in until noon, then think and read in bed for about an hour before having lunch with his wife at about 1:30 pm. He would listen to music, reply to the mail, run errands, and then begin writing which he would do for about four hours.
He would then have dinner and cocktails with friends and family until about 9 pm and then stay up to 3 reading, drinking listening to music, and smoking.
With Rose guarding his door, organizing their social life, looking after the kids, running the household, and preventing any interruptions, he was able to churn out a lot of writing over the course of three decades.
He preferred writing novels but sometimes also found time for movie scripts, novellas, reviews, essays short stories, and plays. Some of his best pieces he compiled in “This Quiet Dust and Other Writings.”
“Sophie’s Choice,” by William Styron is really two novels combined into one as the present intersects with the past.
One part is the tribulations and trials of Polish citizen Sophie Zawistowska, who is taken by the Nazis to Auschwitz during the Second World War. The other part is the story of a young writer from Brooklyn struggling to write a great American novel.
It was while he was a boarder at the Pink Palace that Stingo first met Sophie who was then with Nathan Landau her lover. He for the most part just heard them noisily making love in the room above him.
As expected, he had to listen to their lustful consummations even as he had to suffer from unmitigated and inflamed passions. In that state, it was all too easy to start believing that everyone was getting laid and start pitying oneself for his failure.
He is a twenty-two-year-old man that has a high libido and is also looking to rid himself of the malady of virginity.
His yearning to end his involuntary celibacy and have intercourse with a woman soon starts affecting his ability to write and achieve his dreams.
William Styrone’s novel “The Confessions of Nat Turner,” tells the story of Nat Turner, a literate slave who is raised in the house of Benjamin Turner as a house slave.
He is treated as a black jewel above the field slaves but is not immune to human tragedy. As such he is devastated when his mother dies when he is just 14.
Meanwhile, his owner has been debating the vagaries of slavery with family and friends and believes the invention of machines would quickly eradicate the evil institution.
When the man dies, Marse Samuel, his brother helps Nat qualify s a carpenter, and by the time he is 25, he is emancipated. But an economic downturn means his future is not immediately bright.
He is sold to different owners, many of them not so benevolent. In the midst of a lot of uncertainty, Nat develops a relationship with Margaret Whitehead and a passion for the Bible.
He soon becomes known by many whites and blacks alike as Rev. Turner. With his religious underpinning and seething resentment at the brutal and sometimes tragic treatment of fellow blacks, he sets in motion a plan for a violent rebellion.
“Lie Down in Darkness” by William Styron is the author’s debut novel, telling a tragic story that resonates with the painful sense of the arbitrariness of fate and sadness.
Peyton Loftis had been born into a very comfortable family in Virginia. She has stunning good looks, a fine mind, a wry sense of humor, exceptional poise, and a lofty spirit.
While she should have had a very good life, she has always been tormented by a sense of unworthy love and being unloved.
Peyton grows from a totally captivating and precocious little girl to a celebrated and adored college girl. But soon enough she is bewildered and lost Bohemian who does not know how to navigate the north with its alien-like cities.
She is a bewitching debutante who has always seen herself as being among the elite in society but she finds herself a poor fit in the modern world in the north.