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Mary Flannery O'Connor: One of the Best Short Story Writers of Her Day

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One of the best short story writers of her day, Mary Flannery O’Connor was a brilliant writer, and still is, highly acclaimed. Her unique style of writing has a large part in her continued popularity. Ann Garbett states,”…O’Connor combined religious themes from her Roman Catholic vision with a comically realist character from the rural Protestant south to create a fiction that is simultaneously serious and comic” (1910). Mary O’Connor Flannery was an extremely talented young author who experienced hardships throughout her short life’ However, she used these experiences, her Roman Catholic faith, and the writings of William Faulkner and Nathanael West to develop highly praised short stories and novels such as “A Good Man Is Hard To Find” …show more content…

Lowell also introduced O’Connor to the two people who would grow to become her closest friends, Robert and Sally Fitzgerald. She had much in common with the Fitzgeralds; Robert Fitzgerald was a poet and both he and his wife were Catholic. O’Connor actually lived with them in Ridgefield, Connecticut until she was diagnosed with disseminated lupus – the same disease that killed her father. By this time, the disease was treatable but not curable. She decided to move back to Milledgeville to live with her mother on their five hundred and fifty acre dairy farm under strict medical supervision.
Throughout this difficult time, O’Connor continued to write and inspire young people to do the same. When asked to speak at a college or event, O’Connor always readily agreed. “She took advantage of these opportunities not only to give perceptive talks on the nature of fiction, but to clarify her own position as a writer “with Christian concerns”” (Encyclopedia of World Biography). In 1952, O’Connor’s first novel Wise Blood was published. “A Good Man is Hard to Find” and The Violent Bear it Away, soon followed. O’Connor received many awards for her writing such as honorary degrees at St. Mary’s College and Smith College, three O. Henry awards, the Kenyon Review Fellowship in Fiction and many more.
There were many things in her life that influenced the styles of not just these stories but her other books as well. One of the most common in

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