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Flannery O'Connor and the Grotesque Face of God
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12300 |
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BOOK WORLD
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1 / 1987 |
2,655 Words |
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Russell Kirk Russell Kirk is the author of more than thirty books,
including The Conservative Mind, now available in its seventh
revised edition. |
FLANNERY O'CONNOR
Images of Grace
Harold Fickett and Douglas R. Gilbert
Eerdmans, Grand Rapids
151 pp., $ 18.95
In our era of debased literary criticism and the fiction of nihilism, Flannery O'Connor's triumph is a phenomenon almost astounding. (For the most part, it has been a posthumous success with the critics and the reading public.) O'Connor was an earnest Catholic, conservative politically, living in a decayed Georgia town, writing about odd rural people and their experiences with the mysterious ways of Christ. Having written two collections of short stories and two unconventional novels, she died young.
Her books appeared at a time when America's intellectual milieu - or at least the desiccated intellectuality of New York's reviewers and publishers, with few exceptions - clearly was hostile to Christian orthodoxy, the politics of prescription, the South, oldfangled rural life, and the mysteries of being. Yet today, no American novelist is more discussed than O'Connor; her letters and her book reviews are collected, praised by critics, and widely read. In Harold Fickett's phrase, she gives our decadent time an "incarnational art" that may wean us away from our present diet of literary Dead Sea fruit.
This new book, a large paperback handsomely printed with many photographs, is at once a critical study and a succinct biography, gracefully and movingly written by Fickett. His collaborator, Douglas R. Gilbert, is a well-known
... (1989 of 15481 Characters)
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