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A review by bishop_504
A Good Man Is Hard to Find and Other Stories by Flannery O'Connor
challenging
dark
mysterious
reflective
medium-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? A mix
- Strong character development? No
- Loveable characters? No
- Diverse cast of characters? No
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
4.0
I was assigned to read this book for a writing class. We read a short story in between classes and then discussed it.
I think this is probably the best way to enjoy this book. Each story is deceptively simple with lots of ways that it can be read into.
Definitely feels very English class in the way that you’re meant to analyze it, but would probably be really good for something like a book club too.
We looked at it a lot from a Christian perspective, focusing on the idea of the grace of God being something that is both grotesque and holy. Lots of the stories had a sort of Jesus-type character, although interestingly he was not always a moral person. Most of the characters aren’t moral people, the short stories discuss a lot of the human condition and this idea of innate sinfulness. Often the main character of a story gets ‘saved’ in some capacity, but not usually a positive capacity that you might expect. It was pretty interesting.
I was uncomfortable though because the book used the n word and other slurs a lot of times. I’m used to listening to rap and stuff, but it definitely is more weird when some white lady writes it down. I guess this book is pretty old but it still felt weird to me, even if the point was that the people she wrote saying those things were not moral people. To Kill a Mockingbird type beat I guess.
I think this is probably the best way to enjoy this book. Each story is deceptively simple with lots of ways that it can be read into.
Definitely feels very English class in the way that you’re meant to analyze it, but would probably be really good for something like a book club too.
We looked at it a lot from a Christian perspective, focusing on the idea of the grace of God being something that is both grotesque and holy. Lots of the stories had a sort of Jesus-type character, although interestingly he was not always a moral person. Most of the characters aren’t moral people, the short stories discuss a lot of the human condition and this idea of innate sinfulness. Often the main character of a story gets ‘saved’ in some capacity, but not usually a positive capacity that you might expect. It was pretty interesting.
I was uncomfortable though because the book used the n word and other slurs a lot of times. I’m used to listening to rap and stuff, but it definitely is more weird when some white lady writes it down. I guess this book is pretty old but it still felt weird to me, even if the point was that the people she wrote saying those things were not moral people. To Kill a Mockingbird type beat I guess.
Graphic: Racial slurs and Racism