For many critics, Flannario Connor is "a very devout Catholic (in the 13th century, herself explains)", Mark Bosco is pastor of Jesuit, Professor of Loyola University Theology and English Studies in Chicago ( Bosco 41 qtd). In addition to being from Georgia, O'Connor was a short-lived but experienced life during the ethnic conflict. She believes she has come from another century, but she is strongly aware of the southern world of the 20th century, and she expresses this through her short stories.
Flannery O'Connor's "good guys are hard to find" predicts the Flannery O'Connor of the George Dynasty, one of the most prolific writers of the 20th century. As a strict Catholic, O'Connor often shows spiritual corruption in most of her stories. One famous story of O'Connor, "good people are hard to find", reveals the image of mental deficiency inherent in personality. Grandma conveyed a misfit warning, but her activity itself is an impending end sign.
At the age of 22, the famous 20th century Southern writer Mary Flanner O'Connor began his career in 1947 and created his own unique way of writing. . During the short years of O'Connor she completed 31 short stories and 2 novels. In the Romanian roots, Roman Catholics set all the stories from "intense comedy" to "serious tragedy", using her religious background and environment. As a "humorous and grotesque genius" O'Connor distorted her work and made it unique. Flannery O'Connor used her work "Good Country People", "Revelation", "Sisterhood", "Social Structure" and "Setting" to solve "Old Country", "Revelation", "Parker's Back" I used various kinds of humor from "Parker's Back".
The author Flannery O1 Connor was born in Savannah, Georgia on March 25, 1925. The fact that she was born and became a Catholic, proved her personal beliefs and helped her self-reliance and the formation of satire to her life. According to our textbook, "O1 Conner novel is closely related to the worldly spiritual life" (318). Her novels and stories include religious themes and spiritual problems. Indeed, in many of her story, the hero doubt her own beliefs or experienced big apocalyptic change. This article starts with a question. Did the hero of O1 Connor's short story "Revelation" experience real revelation? And answering this question is loudly "no".