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Not to give short shrift to the chicken yard. It was, in fact, a chicken that brought Mary Flannery O' Connor her first brush with fame, a condition that, as a successful adult writer, she would later brush off as "a comic distinction shared with Roy Rogers' horse and Miss Watermelon of 1955." As a remarkably self-possessed five-year-old, Mary Flannery somehow came to the attention of the Pathé newsreel company, who sent a cameraman to the O'Connors' backyard in order to film a chicken that she had trained to walk backward.
The chicken was uncooperative and died shortly afterward, but the the backward-walking chicken became one of O'Connor's earliest entries in what would become a lifelong obsession with comically doomed characters (the story itself was so important to her that two decades later, Robert Lowell would record their first meeting in a letter to Elizabeth Bishop that identified O'Connor only as the girl who once had a chicken who walked backward). In it, Gooch sees all of the elements of her grown-up fiction: "This clever child performer grew into the one-of-a-kind woman writer, 'going backwards to Bethelehem' who freighted her acidly comic tales with moral and religious messages, running counter to so much trendy literary culture."
O'Connor's family life in Georgia didn't easily fit into any southern clichés. Irish Catholics occupied a liminal space in the South (as Gooch points out, "Catholics were explicitly banned, along with rum, lawyers and blacks under the Georgia Trust in 1733"), and in O'Connor's time they were divided into middle-class "lace-curtain" Catholics and lower-class "shanty" Catholics. O'Connor's family was decidedly of the lace-curtain sort. The infant Mary Flannery O'Connor was paraded around town in a gold-monogrammed perambulator, took swimming lessons at the fanciest hotel in town as a young child, and arrived at her private school in an electric car with a little vase of artificial flowers on the sideboard. In her extended family, there were an unusual number of independent, wealthy businesswomen, including the family matriarch, Cousin Katie Semmes; Flannery's mother ran a dairy and later cattle farm after her husband's death from lupus at 45.
Even as a child, Mary Flannery was taken seriously: She called her parents Regina and Edward and had her own listing in the town phone book from the time she was in preschool. At age 12, she vowed not to get any older. As she later wrote to Betty Hester: "There was something about 'teen' attached to anything that was repulsive to me. I certainly didn't approve of what I saw of people that age. I was a very ancient twelve; my views at that age would have done credit to a Civil War veteran. I am much younger now that I was at twelve, or anyway, less burdened. The weight of centuries lies on children, I'm sure of it."
She retained this quality of a wise child or old soul; as an adult, she liked to jokingly refer to herself as "13th century." What did she mean by it? Robert Giroux, her publisher said, "She was completely intellectual and cerebral. She was a thinker. And in those days encountering a philosophical woman thinker was rarer." After completing four years at the Georgia State College for Women (which, she pointed out, would qualify her "only for a job in Podunk, Georgia, earning $87.50 per month") while living at home with her family, she made the seemingly bold move to pursue a master's degree at the University of Iowa. This was followed by several years living with her literary peers in Manhattan, at Yaddo and with poet Robert Fitzgerald and his family in Connecticut. In this crowd, O'Connor often stood out for her perceived innocence, sexual and otherwise (Robert Lowell once described her as "our Yaddo child"), and her Catholic piety (Elizabeth Hardwick said she was "like some quiet, puritanical convent girl"), and she was sometimes condescended to because of her "barbarous Georgian accent" (which Paul Engle, who would become her writing teacher, found so impenetrable that at their first meeting, he asked her to write him a note instead). But her writing commanded respect. As Gooch points out, she occupied "the fortunate spot, shared by Lowell but few others, of having crossed a Mason-Dixon line of literary politics -- published by the Sewanee and Kenyon Review, associated with conservative, even reactionary writers, as well as by Partisan Review, the provenance of left-leaning, often Jewish New York intellectuals."
O'Connor may have remained a southern literary expat indefinitely, had her health not intervened. In 1950, she crossed the Mason-Dixon Line to visit her mother for Christmas and ended up more or less grounded for good -- at 25, she was suffering from lupus, the same autoimmune disorder that had killed her father. She would spend the 15 years until her death on her mother's Milledgeville farm, where, as she wrote, "There is no one around who knows anything at all about fiction or much about any kind of writing for that matter. Sidney Lanier and David Whitehead Hickey are the Poets and Margaret Mitchell is the Writer. Amen."
But when she wasn't taking trips between the house and the chicken yard, she engaged in lively intellectual correspondence -- both on the page and with guests who made the pilgrimage to Milledgeville -- and published the two novels and the bulk of her short stories. When her first novel, Wise Blood, came out, she was feted at teas hosted by ladies who were later scandalized enough by the book's contents to stash their signed copies in the attic. She wrote to her friends the Fitzgeralds about her mother's reaction to reviews comparing her daughter's work to Kafka: "Regina is getting very literary. 'Who is this Kafka?' she says. 'People ask me.' A German Jew, I says, I think. He wrote a book about a man who turned into a roach. 'Well I can't tell people that,' she says." (Gooch fittingly, notes: "My daily 'Google Alert' for 'Flannery O' Connor' attests that the phrase 'like something out of Flannery O'Connor' is now accepted shorthand, like 'Kafkaesque' before it, for nailing a funny, dark, askew moment.")
While O'Connor's sojourn in the North, where her conservative piety often clashed with the views of her liberal, secular friends, may have highlighted her iconoclastic character, it was her equally uneasy life as the strange, overeducated spinster daughter in a southern family that gave her a the particularly comic, allegorical lens through which her fictions present the world. Even her illness, in the end, proved useful. As she wrote to Betty Hester, "I have never been anywhere but sick. In a sense, sickness is a place more instructive than a long trip to Europe, and it's a place where there's no company, where nobody can follow. Success is almost as isolating and nothing points out vanity as well." --Amy Benfer
Amy Benfer has worked as an editor and staff writer at Salon, Legal Affairs, and Paper magazine. Her reviews and features on books have appeared in Salon, The San Francisco Chronicle Book Review, The Believer, Kirkus, and The New York Times Book Review.
Prologue: Walking Backward 3
Part 1
Chapter 1 Savannah 13
Chapter 2 Milledgeville: "A Bird Sanctuary" 51
Chapter 3 "MFOC" 82
Chapter 4 Iowa 117
Chapter 5 Up North 148
Part 2
Chapter 6 The Life You Save 189
Chapter 7 The "Bible" Salesman 222
Chapter 8 Freaks and Folks 259
Chapter 9 Everything That Rises 297
Chapter 10 "Revelation" 338
Acknowledgments 375
Notes 387
Index 437
Before I begin, I must tell you, I have never read anything by Flannery O' Connor. I may have glanced at a story of hers in high school but that was so long ago. This might have hampered my enjoyment of Gooch's novel if it had been less interesting and badly written but, thankfully, Flannery was an interesting read in itself.
I was a bit worried when I started reading because of my lack of knowledge about Flannery O'Connor. I was surprised when I immediately became engrossed in Flannery's life. I became attached to her and I wanted to know more about her. She was quite the quirky character. I often found myself laughing out loud at something she said or did. She was quite the character and I really enjoyed getting to know her.
Flannery was an extremely well-written book. It was one of the few biographies that I have read that managed to be informative but not overbearing. I thought it was a really balanced portrayal of Flannery O'Connor. The pictures also enhanced the material in the book. They provided an excellent visual reference point. Sometime I find that pictures are chosen for aesthetics rather than to serve a purpose but that definitely was not the case with this biography. When I wanted to get a mental image of a place that O'Connor frequented, I looked in the picture insert. I did at points become confused as to who was who because of the constant parade of people through O'Connor's life but after a while the names became familiar and easy to remember when they were referenced again.
For someone who has never read a word of Flannery O'Connor (that she can remember), I really became attached to her. I want to read her works now. And I think I will. Someday.
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Posted April 20, 2009
I gave this as a gift to someone very fond of American literature, someone who's read a lot of O'Connor (including another biography), and she raved about it--couldn't stop reading it.
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Overview
The landscape of American literature was fundamentally changed when Flannery O'Connor stepped onto the scene with her first published book, Wise Blood, in 1952. Her fierce, sometimes comic novels and stories reflected the darkly funny, vibrant, and theologically sophisticated woman who wrote them. Brad Gooch brings to life O'Connor's significant friendships--with Robert Lowell, Elizabeth Hardwick, Walker Percy, and James Dickey among others--and her deeply felt convictions, as expressed in her communications with Thomas Merton, Elizabeth Bishop, and Betty Hester. Hester was famously known as "A" in O'Connor's collected letters, The Habit of Being, and a large cache of correspondence to her from O'Connor was made available ...