She wrote only 2 novels and
had 2 collections of stories.
After her death, the 2
collections were published
as The Complete Stories.
It won the National Book
Award (1972) as well as a
2009 poll for the best book
in the history of the
contest (from 1950-2008).
The last years of her life
were spent at her family
farm in central Georgia,
where she wrote most of
her body of work
in-between battling the
autoimmune disease lupus.
O’Connor was devoutly
Catholic, which influenced
her writing.
Catholicism was an outlier
in the South.
She believed that she would
have no reason to write if
she were not Catholic.
“I would have no reason to
write, no reason to see, no
reason ever to feel horrified
or even to enjoy anything.”
Short Story Background
Written & published in 1953.
First published in the
anthology "The Avon Book of
Modern Writing" in 1953.
One of O’Connor’s
best-known stories due to its
frequent appearance in
anthologies.
This story, like many of her
other ones, follows a pattern
that involves a main character
recognizing “the falseness of
their views.”
This story is a famous
example Southern Gothic
literature.
O’Connor did not like
this definition of her
work. Her stories always
kept plenty of realism
that other writers in this
subgenre of gothic
literature did not.
O’Connor offers a commentary
on Southern life and morals
using dark and sometimes
sinister or absurd events.
Villains or bad guys often act
like they are not all that bad or
make themselves out to be the
victim.
The Misfit is an example of a
villain that does not have a
sense of himself as a bad guy.
He is able to justify his life of
crime.
Characters
Bailey
Bailey's wife
Bailey's children
The grandmother
Sammy
Sammy's wife
The Misfit
Bobby Lee
Hiram
one of The Misfit’s crew
one of The Misfit’s crew
According to June Star, he looks like a pig.
a dangerous criminal loose
from a federal penitentiary
His moral code is defined by murder
and a complete lack of remorse.
Religion is pointless to him. He believes there
is “no pleasure but meanness” in the world.
“a tall burnt-brown woman with hair and eyes lighter than her skin”
owner of the Tower restaurant the family stops at
A good man in the grandmother’s mind, although she says this in response to his gullibility
a very talkative and opinionated
woman; is nostalgic for the past
She brings up the fact that there are
no good men left whenever she can.
She holds herself to this
idea that she is “a lady.”
She is critical of everyone
around her, but never herself.
John Wesley and June Star
John Wesley – “a stocky child with glasses”; obnoxious
June Star – obnoxious like her brother; makes blunt observations
unnamed mother of
the three children
“a young woman in slacks, whose face was as broad and innocent as a cabbage and was
tied around with a green head-kerchief that had two points on the top like a rabbit’s ears.”
She doesn’t say much in the story. Most of the time
she is mentioned closely with the family’s small baby.
The head of the family who
must deal with his
frustrating mother.
“He didn’t have a naturally
sunny disposition like she did
and trips made him nervous.”
“He had on a yellow sport shirt with
bright blue parrots designed in it and
his face was as yellow as the shirt.”
Plot Overview
A family is traveling by car from Georgia to Florida.
Before they leave the grandmother attempts to convince
her son that they should go to Tennessee instead.
She shows him a newspaper story about an escaped
criminal called The Misfit. It is reported that he is headed to
Florida.
The grandmother goes to the car before anyone else to hide
her cat in the car so she can take it with.
The family leaves; while driving the children occupy
themselves with comic books, the grandmother provides
plenty of unwanted commentary.
They stop at The Tower outside of a town called Timothy to eat
barbecue sandwiches.
Further on into their trip, they are near Toombsboro when the
grandmother remembers a beautiful house she used to visit
when she was young. Bailey agrees to visit the house.
As they are headed down the dirt road to the house, the
grandmother realizes that the house they are looking for is
actually in Tennessee.
She is so embarrassed and startled that she accidentally upsets
the basket holding her hidden cat with her feet.
The cat flies out and jumps on the son who is driving. The son
loses control of the car and they have an accident. The car flips
over violently.
As the entire family is standing around outside the car, they see a
car in the distance.
A strange assortment of men gets out of the car. The grandmother
has the feeling that she recognizes one of them. All of the men
have guns.
Of course, as soon as she realizes it, the grandmother shouts
about it being The Misfit.
As The Misfit has a conversation with the grandmother about
religion and how he must come from “good blood,” the entire
family is taken into the woods by Bobby Lee and Hiram to be shot.
The grandmother is desperately telling The Misfit that he is “a
good man.” She seems relatively unconcerned by the fact that her
entire family is being systematically shot. The Misfit shares about
this family and upbringing.
The grandmother is the last one alive. She and The Misfit have a
conversation about Jesus & religion.
He says that Jesus put the world off balance because he raised the
dead.
The grandmother has a moment where her head clears. This is the
climax of the story.
Her last words are: “Why you’re one of my babies. You’re one of
my own children!”
As she reaches towards The Misfit, he shoots her quickly 3 times.
He picks up her cat, which has come to rub itself against his leg.
Main Ideas and Themes
Goodness
The grandmother struggles to define a
“good man” throughout the story.
She calls Sammy “a good man” because
he let 2 people charge gas and swindle
him out of money. This aligns “goodness”
with poor judgement and blind faith.
Her own goodness is surface-level. –> She
dresses herself up so that she can be seen
as a lady in case of an accident.
Other people are good if they think and act
like she does.
Good appearances make her a good person.
It is what she uses to appeal to The Misfit.
He should not shoot her, because he would
not shoot a “lady.”
Of course, in the end, a good man is hard to
find because they don’t really exist.
People are both good and bad. Their actions
are not ‘all good’ or ‘all bad.’
The Misfit is conventionally a bad man, for
example. However, he does have a strong
sense of self and holds to his convictions. He
has qualities that you would traditionally
attribute to “a good man.”
Grace
“Why you’re one of my babies. You’re
one of my own children.”
Some people disagree about the
grandmother’s final words and act. A
popular interpretation, however, is
that she experiences a moment of
grace before she dies.
Prior to this moment, she tries lying,
flattering, and begging to avoid her
fate.
Her words can be seen as a recognition
that all humanity is connected. The
Misfit, despite his crimes, is as familiar
to the grandmother as if he were her
own son.
The Misfit already understands this to
some extent – that “good men” do not
exist. Rather people have both good
and evil in them.
The grandmother, too, is not as good of
a person on the inside as she presents
herself on the outside.
Many people read this important
moment as the grandmother’s chance
for redemption.
O’Connor writes this moment in a way
that shows The Misfit recoiling from the
old lady as she reaches to touch him. –>
perhaps this is some divine truth
Moral Codes/Moral Decay
Both the grandmother and The Misfit
have different moral codes – ways
that they conduct themselves in the
world.
The grandmother has built hers upon
the notion of herself as a lady – it is
based on appearances. She is blind to
her faults, too.
Her morals are flimsy – she calls
herself pious, but almost forgets how
to pray when confronted with a crisis
and questions her faith.
The Misfit proves to have done a lot of
deep thinking about life and religion
and himself.
He lives with a moral code of violence.
And he holds steady to that moral
code, even when the grandmother
tries to appeal to him in many ways.
The entire story also hinges on this idea
of moral decay in the world.
Good men are getting harder to find.
Sammy remembers a time when you
could leave a door unlocked without
worry. This is not possible anymore.
The idea of moral decay fits into
O’Connor's depiction of the American
South.
The grandmother remembers her past
growing up in the South with a kind of
longing, as though she and her moral
code would fit in better.
Nostalgia
The grandmother longs for the way
things were in the past.
Other characters – Sammy and The
Misfit – also talk about the past fondly.
It was easier to find good men in the
past. It is also harder to be good.
The grandmother tells the children a
story about a suitor from her youth.
She regrets not marrying Mr. Edgar
Adkins Teagarden, because he was a
gentleman (and later got really
wealthy).
Sammy and the grandmother agree
that it was easier to find people to
trust in the past.
The Misfit cannot remember doing the
crimes that he has been punished for.
He is also somewhat regretful that he
wasn’t around to see Jesus raise the
dead – like he would be good if he had
some reassurance.
Symbols
Bailey’s Yellow and Blue
Parrot Shirt
The grandmother twice
compares her son’s shirt to
something related to him.
Yellow like his face
Blue like his eyes
When Bobby Lee brings back the
shirt (taken from Bailey before
he was shot), the grandmother
suddenly can’t think of what it
reminds her of.
The Grandmother’s Hat
The grandmother’s hat is the part of her
outfit mentioned from the beginning of
the car trip until after the accident.
It remains pinned to her head after the
accident, but the brim is broken.
The thing she values most – her
superficial status as a lady – is much
flimsier than she anticipated.
And as her son is led into the woods, she
tries to adjust the brim. It falls off in her
hands and she lets it drop.
This perhaps shows her coming
realization about her personal failings
and the beginning of her acceptance of
something else.