This article first appeared at The
Christian Manifesto.
I
can pinpoint the year I first read Flannery O’Connor.
It was 1976, I was 24 going on 25, and a new person had joined the Public
Affairs Department at Shell Oil where I worked. She came from a well known
Houston family, had lots of eccentric relatives and was an extraordinarily fine
writer. She and I talked about Shell, the oil industry, relatives, literature
and writing; most of all, writing.
She
was shocked that I hadn’t read Flannery O’Conner.
I
started with Three by Flannery O’Connor,
which included The
Violent Bear It Away, Wise
Blood and A
Good Man is Hard to Find. From there I went to The
Complete Stories, and then to Mystery
and Manners, which included her essays and speeches. Finally, I read The
Habit of Being, her letters collected and published in 1979, quite some
time after her death (in 1964 from lupus).
There
are all kinds of stories about Miss O’Connor, some true and many apocryphal.
One that could be true or untrue is that John Kennedy O’Toole left New Orleans
to drive to Georgia to see her, learned she had died some years before, and
killed himself, leaving his manuscript for his mother to worry over. His mother
did, made a huge pest of herself, and finally convinced author Walker Percy to
read it. The manuscript became A
Confederacy of Dunces and won the Pulitzer Prize (this is still the
only novel I’ve read that’s set in what I recognize as authentic New Orleans).
O’Connor’s
works were – are – extraordinary. She is often considered a Southern writer,
and she is that in the sense she was born and lived in the South. But she is
more than that, too.
Her
writing bears the likeness of William Faulkner but in a wholly original way.
She is a kind of heir to Faulkner, particularly in the sense of having
challenged the norms of literature and writing.
But,
as if not more importantly, she is also the heir to G.K. Chesterton. Like him,
she was Catholic. As author Bret
Lott points out in an essay on O’Connor in a 2012 issue of The Writer’s
Chronicle, she is a Catholic writer even more than she is a Southern writer,
and that’s something not normally taught in the English classes where her
stories are studied.
Lott
says something else in his essay (not available online, unfortunately) that
strikes me as profoundly true: you will not find her in her stories. When you
read one of her stories, you forget who’s written it; the point is the story,
not the author. In an age of instant and often fleeting celebrity, her stories
still resonate – and one of the reasons may very well be that she refused to be
one. For her, the story, not the author, was the story, and she was not very
patient with questions about what stories meant or what different aspects or
elements or plot devices or characters were really about. She would tell such
questioners to “read the story.”
She
had a model for this, of course, and that was Jesus. He spent 33 years on this
planet, and then physically removed himself from the Christian narrative – the
narrative that he is still the point of. In many ways, the fact that he’s
physically removed makes the mystery all the greater and all the more
important, and he’s left us his story to study, to tell and to live. And one
day he’ll return to complete it.
It
was that mystery that defined O’Connor’s writing. She’s been dead for almost 50
years, but her influence has, if anything, grown in the intervening years. She
left us with a number of remarkable stories, stories that “tell” just as well
now as they did when she first published them.
I read O'Connor many, many years ago before I was a committed Christian. You've made me want to read her again with new eyes and an open heart.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Glynn!
"From 1956 through 1964, O'Connor wrote more than one hundred book reviews for two Catholic diocesan newspapers in Georgia: The Bulletin, and The Southern Cross. "
ReplyDeletewikipedia
I love Flannery, her work is just filled with such humanity! I wear my Flannery glasses and hair shirt every chance I get!
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