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Mosquitoes

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Mosquitoes
Type
Novel
Language
English
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Wikipedia

Mosquitoes is a satiric novel by the American author William Faulkner. The book was first published in 1927 by the New York-based publishing house Boni & Liveright and is the author's second novel. Sources conflict regarding whether Faulkner wrote Mosquitoes during his time living in Paris beginning in 1925 or in Pascagoula, Mississippi, in the summer of 1926. Its setting and content clearly reference Faulkner's personal involvement in the New Orleans creative community where he spent time before moving to France.

The city of New Orleans and a yacht on Lake Pontchartrain are the two primary settings for the novel. Beginning and ending in the city, the story follows a diverse cast of artists, aesthetes, and adolescents as they embark on a four-day excursion aboard the motorized yacht, the Nausikaa, owned by a wealthy patron of the arts.

The novel is organized into six sections: a prologue which introduces the characters, four body sections each of which documents a day of the yacht trip hour-by-hour, and an epilogue which returns the characters, changed or unchanged, to their lives on land.

The novel's U.S. copyright expired on January 1, 2023, when all works published in 1927 entered the public domain.

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Annotation

Satiric novel first published on April 30, 1927.

Last modified: 2020-10-04 (revision #29336)

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Wikidata Work ID
Q3326411

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Last Modified
2020-10-04