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A Good Man Is Hard To Find Literary Analysis

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A Grandmother’s Folly Thought to be one of Flannery O'Connor's best short stories "A Good Man Is Hard to Find" regales us with the narrative of an inconsiderate maladroit family and their subsequent chilling massacre as committed by fugitives led by a notorious butcher christened the Misfit. This tale is renowned for its spiritual qualities, specifically the author’s portrayal of redemption through the appalling and vicious deaths of her surreal characters. O'Connor can be applauded for her vivid use of colorful details from everyday life in addition to utilizing the comical elements of her southern upbringing. O’Connor also shows a proclivity with the talent to make the reader visualize the eccentricities of characters like the grandmother …show more content…

We discover that this dysfunctional family is preparing to embark upon a short holiday traveling from Georgia to Florida. The grandmother is a tireless manipulator and we find that she wants to go to Tennessee instead of Florida because she has some family members residing there which she has not visited recently. We also immediately realize that “she was seizing every chance to try to change Bailey’s mind” (Pearson 183). When the son and family have no reaction to her petition of changing their destination to Tennessee, she offers for their consideration the possible danger of encountering the mysterious Misfit who has craftily escaped from a federal prison. The text …show more content…

In fact, she never mentions Christ or religion anywhere in the rest of this story, only when she calculates that it may bring about her deliverance do we see her finally invoke the Lords teachings. Remember, her first entreaty to him originates with “I know you’re a good man. You don’t look a bit like you have common blood. I know you must come from nice people!” (Pearson 190), then changes her tactic to religion when it suits her. Her faith reveals itself as hollow, not appearing to run very deep, seemingly being used only as a means to escape the inevitable. This is most evident when she cries out to Jesus as if cursing. We find a huge contrast between her superficial faith and the Misfits deeper, more troubled faith as she doubts Gods

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