Part One
A family relationship is always varied from one family to another. The family relationship that got me interested in the different works came from Good Country people By Flannery O'Connor that comes as a display of a complicated relationship. The relationship between Mrs. Hopewell and Mrs. Freeman appears to be a bit odd right off the bat ( Bloom, 2008 ). Mrs. Hopewell is a divorced woman, and the Freemans she employed to work on her farm are seen to be her sort of a family. The two ladies are seen to get together and gossip in the morning and the relationship between the families is seen to be characterized with strange vibes to it through the entire story, and it is one of the reasons I have selected the story.
Part Two
This part will be focused on Flannery O’Connor’s biography, an only child born in Savanna Georgia in 1925. At the time she was as young as five, a path newsreel used her and a pet Bantam that has the capability to walk backward and forward. Many critics argued that perhaps the chicken pet was a pioneer evident of her desire in the grotesque that has been so much part of her fiction. However, it is as well evident of her adhering desire for foul, that is a desire that later gratified by the population of birds that she was to fill her mother’s dairy yard. The fact that she had an interest in farming is a message that implies that she had something driving her to write about a divorced lady with interest in farming. Her passion for writing is seen to have evolved since her early days as she enrolled in the writer's workshop and received a Master of Fine Arts from the State University of Lowa after graduating from the Georgia College with a B.A in social science ( Simpson, 2005 ).
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There is a connection between Flannery O'Connor and Joy/ Hugla in the narrative Good Country People. Joy lived at her mother's firm with a heart condition and had a life expectancy of almost ten years, and it is seen that Flannery returned to her mother's after she had been diagnosed with Lupus and died relatively young. The two are also well educated in their lives, and it is interesting that Flannery was a religious woman fairly while Joy was an atheist and a non-believer and it can be said that it can be the reason she got what she got in the story.
Part Three
It is easy to believe that Connie goes out of the house with the ill and wired friend and the story is seen to end with a remark "so much land that Connie had never seen before and did not recognize rather than to know she was after it." While reading, it is evident that Arnold friend is a predator considering individual lines. In the context of the soldier in the story, it is not clear how he was AWOL (Perkins & Barbara, 2015). While reading the narrative, it seems to be about a young military person who missed a battle, and he was trying all he can to clear his head. With the team sent to find the soldier, it is evident from a military perspective that they will do everything they can to find the deserted soldier that can come at a significant cost. It is usually what the soldiers are taught, and they never leave a comrade behind regardless of the cost.
Reference
Bloom, H. (2008). Flannery O'Connor . Broomall, PA: Chelsea. Perkins, George, Barbara Perkins. (2015). American Literature Since the Civil War - 2015 edition. McGraw-Hill Learning Solutions, 11/2008. VitalBook file.
Simpson, M. (2005). Flannery O'Connor: A Biography . Westport, Conn. [u.a.: Greenwood.