Flannery O Conner, if you try to get more from a writer than you see on the page it usually depends on the author and the ability they show to you, and of course your own imagination. When the story of the writer is so different and the character is very clear, you sometimes think you know the writer and who they are. People say the writer can find it in his own words. However, while some writers are excellent writers, it is not just for their words and actions. A writer transcending words is a writer who recently read a story.
Both William Faulkner and Flannery O'Conner have mischievous morbid features. In the story of Flannery O'Conner, it is difficult to find good people, but the main concern is that grandmother is old-fashioned and to use it when trying not to tell a story and be killed. William Faulkner's story "A Emily for Rose" also focuses on old-fashioned Emily, but you can not get used to it and stick to it. Both have a morbid end as they did not give up on past events and used their ancient customs in different ways.
Southern Gothic's novel is a literary style that often examines the value of the South using the effects of terrorism and satire and criticizes it. A good example of this type is a good person who thinks Flannery O'Conner is hard to find. This is an eerie story about family travel mistakes, as ignorant grandmothers caused their cars to catch their families after they hit the roadside groove. They were relieved to see the cars parked by them, but they disappeared as soon as they noticed that the car driver was a fugitive "misfit". Then the accomplice of the criminal took the family into the forest and killed them, and her grandmother applauded her life. At the end of the story, Misfit ignored her grandmother's request and shot her with a blank sheet.