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Good Man Is Hard To Fi...
 
by
Flannery O'Connor

Good Man Is Hard To Find And Other Stories

4.27 of 5 stars 4.27  ·  rating details  ·  16,128 ratings  ·  931 reviews
The collection that established O'Connor's reputation as one of the american masters of the short story. The volume contains the celebrated title story, a tale of the murderous fugitive The Misfit, as well as "The Displaced Person" and eight other stories.
Published (first published 1953)
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(showing 1-30 of 3,000)
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matt
This stuff is twisted, sparse, clipped, dark, doomy, funny, dramatic, Southern, angry, sexy, super Catholic, death-haunted, maniacial, bizarre, possibly racist, apparently desperate, fatalistic, existential, dreary, ugly, fetid, frenzied, morbid, lax, stern, prepossessing, unforgiving, unrelenting, anti-everything, aged, "retro", haunting, parabolic, anecdotal, moral, redemptive, sublime, reasoned, feverish, dreamlike, unsparing, sparse, I said that one already, seductive, craftsmanlike, worried...more
Jenn(ifer)
Jul 25, 2012 Jenn(ifer) rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Jason and naysayers like Jason
Recommended to Jenn(ifer) by: Flannery told me in a dream

A review in song form (thank you Sufjan): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FlcrHE...

*****

The short story is quickly becoming my favorite fiction genre (unlike Jason here who “just [doesn’t] have time for [them] anymore"). Well, I hope everyone makes the time to read this collection, because every bit of it is outstanding. While her first shot at writing a novel was a bit sloppy, you’ll find that with short stories she is a master of her craft.

The title story “A Good Man Is Hard to Find,” is not a...more
Paquita Maria Sanchez
I have been stewing on this book all night...it was 1)terrific in every and 2)completely rotten in every way and 3)scary, scary, terrifying scary without trying too hard to be. O'Connor has said that she searches in the darkest, most hopeless little worlds for "god's grace" (or more specifically, "god's presence", be it dark or light). Seeing as I have no fear of the wrath of an angry god, why did this book affect me so deeply, leaving me with a stunned expression staring at a blank wall for sev...more
K.D. Oliveros
Oct 31, 2011 K.D. Oliveros rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to K.D. by: 501 Must Read Books (Modern Fiction)
So far, the best short story collection that I've read. Flannery O'Connor's prose can make you sing. However, the songs are predominantly dark, tragic and sad. The most appropriate image that I can think of is that scene in The Wizard of Oz when the tornado is ravaging the Kansas farm of Dorothy's parents and then picture her singing "Somewhere Over the Rainbow" while the bicycle-riding wicked witch is smiling at her.

Quite an appropriate picture because Flannery O'Connor was born in Georgia and...more
Lee
Vacillated between three and four stars -- almost rounded up for a few reasons but decided to go with my gut and rate it as I'd read it. It's clearly a canonical foundational model for the conventional, centrist, conservative short-story form. But still I heard echoes of Saunders and DFW, not to mention so much solid BASS-grade short fiction, but that's also the issue I think I had with it: for the most part I was over-aware these were stories, always aware of their form, their steadiness, sugge...more
Willowfaerie
This is an extremely well-written cache of disturbing short stories. Although I’m not quite sure I read them the same way O’Connor intended. I say that because I come from a different time and a different place. I’m not the devout Catholic that O’Connor obviously was. Consequently, I’m not sure I completely grasped the full light of God’s grace. I tended to read these stories with a skeptical eye. They unsettled me, the religious aspect never giving me peace.

O’Connor likes to zero in on people’...more
Jamie
First things first, O’Connor did exactly what she intended to do here. It’s not a failure by any stretch (if, at times, close-cropped and uneven). Whatever she’s doing, cruel and unusual, she’s good at it. But dear God, it just happens to be the exact kind of thing that revolts something deep down in my gut. I’m usually all on board with the creepy, crazy, what-have-you, but the difference here is that nobody is even alive before they’re dead.

“Bleak,” “oppressive,” “macabre,” all of that applie...more
Joseph
Feb 15, 2011 Joseph rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: lovers of the written word
The last book I read was also a collection of short stories, but that is where the comparison stops. Each and every one of the stories in A Good Man is Hard to Find is a gem, masterfully polished and displayed by Ms. O'Connor.

This is, I think, the third or fourth time I've read through this book, and I still can't decide what she thinks of the human experiment. On the one hand, she paints her characters with such exquisite detail, putting forth their quirks and foibles in such a way that you can...more
Ken Moten
Nov 18, 2012 Ken Moten rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Bad men?
"Those who love their lives will lose them, and those who hate their lives in this world will keep them forever." - John 12:25 (Common English Bible)

"The dragon is by the side of the road, watching those who pass. Beware lest he devour you. We go to the Father of Souls, but it is necessary to pass by the dragon." - St. Cyril of Jerusalem (Quote at the beginning of the story)


This one required 2 quotes; my first Flannery O'Connor.
I will probably spoil but I won't tag this whole review; nor will...more
Catie
Feb 19, 2013 Catie rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to Catie by: Flannery's parents, indirectly.
I enjoy all kinds of writing. I like the simple, breezy writing that’s entertaining and takes very little effort to understand. I like the dense, loaded writing that takes weeks of thought and discussion to fully unpack. The remarkable thing about the writing of Flannery O’Connor is that it somehow seems to encompass that entire spectrum.

Her writing is without a doubt easy to digest, but I would never in a million years call it simple. Reading her prose feels less like reading and more like hav...more
James
How do I explain my awe in the face of O'Connor's fiction when my literary worldview is so of a mind with Jamie's, as highlighted in her conflicted review? I would hate for it to be something as reductive as how bizarre O'Connor's writing is on a surface level (in tone, primarily), but that's certainly part of it. Another is my secular upbringing by an avowed atheist pa and a non-practicing Christian ma continuing to inform my intense fascination with how religion shapes and scars the pre-adoles...more
Jana
One would say, Flannery is a nice Southern lady who wrote this little book with this cute name: 'A Good Man Is Hard to Find'. She was probably a lonely spinster, spent her life reading romances, swinging on her porch, drinking lemonade and making up lovely stories. A-a.

Big mistake from the beginning: I still have not read a book where USA South hasn't been portrayed as the devil's pit in a human form. She is sensational. I’ve never read a book like this. Her stories are completely dark and cree...more
Rochelle Torke
Oh good lord. Someone said she made the south seem even creepier than it already was and i agree with a shudder. And my experience is that you can never really shake off these stories. She can create a character in five words that you will recognize instantly way, way down in your cerebellum--or maybe somewhere in your gut--and it will live there inside you forever. I think she is the unmatched master of the short story form. And don't get me wrong, you will laugh at times while reading. But the...more
Jeanette
I don't aspire to write fiction. Knowing one's limitations is a gift. But oh, if I could only write short stories like Flannery. She shows you scenes so real it feels like voyeurism, and some so unsettling that you'll be glad it's fiction. These characters do not work and play well with others!

The longest story, "The Displaced Person," is a masterpiece about hypocrisy and prejudice. The imagery is perfect. In fact, the imagery in all of her stories is amazing.
Joan
This book haunts me. Her images and characters are so vivid, that I can recall them six years later as if I read this book yesterday says something of the power of masterfully crafted language.

Flannery O'Connor was devout Catholic, which made her a bit of an ousider in the Evangelical Protestant South. If I had to summarize her worldview is that she believes in God, but not so much in people.

Kirby
By golly, I cannot get enough of Southern Gothic literature-- I simply CANNOT!

Flannery O'Connor is fantastic. She has one of the most distinctive tones of any writer I've ever encountered, and she weaves these fascinating, tense, poignant and somewhat disturbing stories with a grace that is pretty freaking unparalleled. This collection is full of tales about seemingly simple rural folk, with a powerful sprinkle of ironic turns and shockingly abrupt twists. And although the book was first publis...more
Nathan
One of my college professors once said that when you finish a story by Flannery O'Connor, you feel like you have been yelled at. I know exactly what he means. This is exhausting, heavy fiction, and as you finish most of these stories, your heart is racing and you need to sit and recover for a few minutes before you do anything else.

To be honest, I really didn't like this set of short stories at first. They tend to be morbid, violent, and (at times) simply weird. But after finishing the book, an...more
Tumbleweed
Bad stuff first:
These stories are not at all what I expected. I'm adding this book to my "wtf reads" shelf, because that's the feeling I get when I'm reading these: WTF? That being said, I generally enjoy a little WTF quality in my novels - provided I can make sense of it at some point. I enjoy the confusion, provided I don't remain confused (if that makes sense). Stories like "The Life You Save May Be Your Own" just completely blew me out of the water and into another galaxy of pure mystificati...more
Evan Snyder
I wish I had gotten the addition with the "other stories" that I am seeing should have come with this from the other editions. I was not really looking for critical essays to read on it, but was more interested in O'Connor's content.

However, since this is the edition that I found in the library...

As with Wise Blood, the text to me very much demonstrates O'Connor's disillusionment with religion. The grandma continually tries to convince the Misfit to pray, and get Jesus to help him. Grandma, howe...more
Fred
it's hard to know what to compare flannery o'connor's short stories to. the only thing that pops to mind and seems apt is the bible. these stories are biblical for a lot reasons -- for one, the prose, which is so masterfully written that it seems like the work of some unimpeachable deity. and also, the boldness of the stories. there are these massive, brutal, unavoidable moments of revelation that you never think to question. it all just seems so bizarre and yet inevitable. i dunno, i'm not doin...more
M.L.
AGM is one of those books that I had once read (parts of) out of obligation (English class), but now can read with intentionality. I guess I can only say that my 15-year-old self was an illiterate little shit. Short stories so often hinge on just one sentence or just one paragraph, that it's no surprise if my pulp-fiction, page-turning pimple-self couldn't the point. Call me older and more patient, now.

FoC's stories are like the moments before a train wreck, recorded in slow motion, and returned...more
Vanessa Sanchez
The short story "A good man is hard to find" by Flannery O'connor was very appealing to me. It was shocking and also in away made me mad because if the family would have listened they would have been okay, but their situation was crazy and very interesting. It starts out with the mother of bailey trying to get him to take his family to Tennessee instead of Florida because of something she read about a criminal named the Misfit, let loose and on his way to Florida. Of course the son doesn't list...more
Melissa
O’Connor is often called the master of the short story and that moniker is well-earned. As I read this collection I recognized many of the stories. I’d read them as part of other collections, but they were just as powerful the second time around. They are vivid and eerie with just a tinge of moral lessons sprinkled in.

I tend to avoid short stories because they never seem to stick with me. Usually I can read a dozen of them and forget them by the next day, but this book was different. O’Connor’s...more
Ricky German
I love Flannery O'Connor so much! Her stories are not for the faint of heart, and that's probably why I like them.

I didn't really connect with them until I read Mystery and Manners. M & M sheds so much light on her writing. In the title story, "A Good Man is Hard to Find," when you realize that she meant for the grandmother to be the heroine of the story, it sort of throws you for a loop because none of her characters are really that likable, let alone this crotchety, closed-minded woman. T...more
Eraserhead
Hit or miss. I think O'Connor is incredibly overrated, really, in modern american letters.

All of her stories go as follows:
1)introduced to a character that seems Good but we know probably isn't
2)set up some cheeky moral conundrum that is a pretty heavy-metaphor for morality
3)include a clumsy discussion of theology to drive home the story's qualities of parable
4)reveal that the characters are in fact Bad by showing their misguided journey towards Good
5)if at all possible, end with a cutesy Grad...more
Mikey Gee
Think the bloodiest scenes of the Old Testament set fifty to eighty years after the end of Gone with the Wind. It ought to chill your blood even if you believe the horror ultimately leads to salvation. I think it is necessary for readers to understand that what O'Connor is always depicting is some one's salvation and that this does not reduce the horror. Salvation (in the Christian view) is supposed to be horrific, earth shattering, destroying not pleasant or nice. Remember that it is brought ab...more
Daniel
A Good Man Is Hard to Find

Beautifully written short story, I am very impressed at how well the author managed to transfer the southern American accent to paper in her dialogues. This is something which I am gradually learning from my writing experiences is not always an easy thing to do. Many say the story is written in a way that leads the reader to dislike all of the characters and in the end sympathise with the killer. It is true I disliked all of the characters except the grandmother, I tho...more
Michael Tucker
One of the reasons we like to read it that reading takes us to a different place and a different time. And that is what this collection of short stories by southern noir writer Flannery O’Connor does. Mary Flannery O’Connor (March 25, 1925 – August 3, 1964) writes in a style that captures the voice of an era that is long gone and of a place that is no more. The truth of her stories touched me and brought back memories of my mother’s family in West Virginia. I felt like I knew the people Ms. O’Co...more
Sergio
Just amazing. Some of the best short fiction I've ever read. Dark, darkly humorous at times, grim, and deeply moving stories of moral choices - often bad ones - under dire circumstances. O'Connor draws out the subtle, often entirely internal despair of her characters in a wsy that makes them feel palpable and real, which makes the stories quite scary at times. Her language is violent and shocking, but beautifully economical, and her resolutions are never easy or clean.

I get that she's labeled a...more
Bruce
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Mary Flannery O'Connor was an American novelist, short-story writer and essayist. O'Connor's writing often reflected her own Roman Catholic faith, and frequently examined questions of morality and ethics.

Her The Complete Stories received the 1972 National Book Award for Fiction. In a 2009 online poll conducted by the National Book Foundation, the collection was named the best work to have won the...more
More about Flannery O'Connor...
The Complete Stories Everything That Rises Must Converge Wise Blood The Violent Bear it Away Collected Works: Wise Blood / A Good Man is Hard to Find / The Violent Bear it Away / Everything that Rises Must Converge / Essays and Letters (Library of America #39)

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“She would of been a good woman," said The Misfit, "if it had been somebody there to shoot her every minute of her life.” 177 people liked it
“All my stories are about the action of grace on a character who is not very willing to support it, but most people think of these stories as hard, hopeless and brutal.” 58 people liked it
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