The Sound and the Fury Audiobook

The Sound and the Fury by William Faulkner on audiobook: what it's about, why it works on audio, and how to listen free with an Audiobooks.com trial.

AudiobookNook is reader-supported. When you start a free trial or buy through links on our site, we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases. We only recommend audiobooks and services we believe in.
The Sound and the Fury Audiobook

A landmark of American modernism, William Faulkner’s 1929 novel pulls you inside the unraveling of a once-proud Southern family. It is bold, fractured, and unlike anything else you’ll hear, and the audio format gives its famous shifting voices a startling new life.

Listen to The Sound and the Fury Free30-day free trial • Your first audiobook free • Cancel anytime

What The Sound and the Fury is about

“The Sound and the Fury” follows the Compsons, a declining aristocratic family in Faulkner’s fictional Yoknapatawpha County, Mississippi. The story is told across multiple sections, each filtered through a different consciousness, as the family grapples with loss, obsession, pride, and decay over the early decades of the twentieth century. Faulkner moves freely through time and memory, letting impressions, fragments, and the past intrude on the present so that the reader pieces the family’s history together rather than being handed it.

The result is one of the most ambitious experiments in stream-of-consciousness fiction ever written. It rewards patience and attention, building toward a portrait of a household and a vanishing social order in slow, accumulating power. If you enjoy literature that trusts you to lean in and assemble meaning for yourself, this is a defining example of the form.

AuthorWilliam Faulkner
ISBN9780739325360
List price$9.98

Why The Sound and the Fury is great on audio

Hearing this novel read aloud can untangle some of what makes the page so demanding, letting the rhythm and emotion of each narrator’s voice carry you through the shifts in time. The interior, voice-driven nature of the prose suits the audio format especially well. Listening is a strong way to experience Faulkner’s layered structure for the first time, or to revisit it with fresh ears.

Who should listen

This one is for readers who love serious literary fiction and don’t mind working a little for a big payoff. If stream-of-consciousness writers and immersive, demanding prose appeal to you, you’ll find a lot to admire here. Newcomers seeking a light, plot-forward listen may want to ease in slowly.

If you like The Sound and the Fury, listen to these next

How to get the The Sound and the Fury audiobook free

Yes — the easiest way to get the The Sound and the Fury audiobook free is with an Audiobooks.com free trial. Your first audiobook is free, so you can listen to The Sound and the Fury during the 30-day trial and cancel anytime.

Listen to The Sound and the Fury Free30-day free trial • Your first audiobook free • Cancel anytime

Frequently asked questions

Is this a difficult listen for first-time Faulkner readers?
It can be, especially early on, because the narration shifts perspective and moves nonlinearly through time. Hearing it read aloud often helps, since the spoken voice clarifies tone and pacing. Going in expecting to piece things together gradually makes the experience far more rewarding.

How can I get The Sound and the Fury audiobook free?
You can listen through an Audiobooks.com free trial, which gives you your first audiobook free to enjoy during a 30-day trial, and you can cancel anytime. Note that a free-trial title is for listening during the trial, not yours to keep after cancelling; only purchased audiobooks stay in your library.

What genre and era does this book belong to?
It is a work of literary fiction and a cornerstone of American modernism, first published in 1929. It is best known for its experimental stream-of-consciousness technique and its Southern setting.

Will the audiobook spoil the experience of the unusual structure?
Not at all. The audio preserves the novel’s distinctive multi-perspective design, and many listeners find the spoken delivery makes the transitions easier to follow than on the page while keeping the original’s intended sense of discovery intact.