Flannario Connor's "Hard to find good" short story, "A good person is hard to find", the hero is a grandmother. The author, Flannery O'Connor, makes the reader understand who her grandmother is, through conversations and reactions with other characters in the story. My grandmother is the most important person in the story. This little old lady is the hero of this work. We learned more about her through a direct conversation with my son Bailey, her grandchild, Junestar and John Wesley, and Misfit Killer.
Flannery O'Connor is struggling to find grandma with "naughty". Flannery O'Connor talks about "It is difficult to find good people". My grandmother operated in the past, deceived, and a selfish woman. She does not cherish her life, but long ago she will make it beautiful when she saw life through rosy glasses. - The experience of African Americans with Langston Hughes of Zora Neale Hurston is an excellent writer of Zora Neale Hurston and Langston Hughes, but the attitude towards personal experiences as African Americans varies. These differences arise from various reasons from gender to life, but even if you have different views on the experience of African-Americans, they share a common goal of achieving racial equality through art It is.
Flannery O'Connor uses the symbolism that "it is difficult to find a good person." Flannery O'Connor who wrote "Good people are hard to find" is a short story depicting family trips to Florida. They met a criminal who escaped from a prison, misfit. This story should be interpreted as a fable and O'Connor uses the symbol to skillfully convey information such as class consciousness and lack of spiritual belief among humans. - In her speech, Flannery O'Connor made a speech entitled "Writing Short Stories". "I think most of you tell stories ..." (O'Connor # 2 PG). She died at lupus in 1964, she was only 39 years old. Shortly thereafter, she became a literary idol. O'Connor is struggling to understand that people think that writing a novel as a chore, one of "the most difficult literary forms" (O'Connor # 2 PG)