At the beginning of the revelation of Flannery O'Connor, Ruby Turpin and her husband Claud entered the doctor's waiting room and Claud was kicked by the cow. When Claude waits for her, she will leave the rest of the room. There are some white garbage, "Red Haired Young Ladies", she is white garbage, not just ordinary, neat dress, beautiful lady, and a woman wearing her daughter, girls children's shoes, bad mood That ugly girl is reading a book called "Human Development". Listen to the gospel songs played on Mrs. Ladio, the radio.
"Revelation" FLANNERY O'CONNOR (1964) was first announced in the Sewanee Review in the spring of 1964 and won first prize at the O. HENRY Memorial Award in 1965. This is the seventh story of everything that must be merged into the FLANNERY O'CONNOR collection (1956). By combining nature and supernatural, the Apocalypse achieves the religious devotion of that title by tracing the elegance of Mrs. Ruby Turpin. She began to draw her from a doctor sitting by a doctor until she saw the soul rise to heaven in the order that she did not anticipate. Satire of Rich O'Connor, the story shows my wife
Facts about companions of American short story document, 2nd edition (literary series companion)
When reading the story of Flannario Connor's 'Apocalypse', the reader must consider the configuration as one of the most important elements. There are basically two different settings in this story. The first is the waiting room in the clinic and the other is the "pig farm". Strangely, these settings have many similarities that may or may not be obvious to the reader. If these two settings are similar, it helps to reinforce the meaning of the overall work when looking at in detail. The story begins in the waiting room of a clinic. This room is very small, it is said to be "incompetent and ridiculous" (Meyer 340). There are six chairs and sofas in the space, and all of them have magazine tables in the middle. After entering the room, the hero and the big female Ruby Turpin "her presence makes the room appear smaller" (Meyer 340)