“A Good Man is Hard to Find“
"She connected and touched him on the shoulder. The Misfit sprang over as though a snake had chomped him and shot her three times through the midsection." Flannery O'bith "A Good Man is hard to Find" is the story of a family's travel disastrously finished by a killer and his pack. After a nosy Mother/mother-In-Law/grandmother tries to demand that the family head off to Tennessee rather than Florida, it was indeed through her own particular requirement that aroused the family stray from the primary way in inquiry of some false, lost treasure. This fatal choice made the family fall prey to the Misfit. Foreshadowing at the start of the story insights to the spectator that whileshdbvjsbv kshfviwhfishvbbvbbvbvwubvnajvsolvjkxjbvsilc s nojugownve tprjte terterbt er teryrtujrge yrthfwarysh szbdffhritbsge
O’Connor’s utilization of characterization shows the breaking down of appreciation and restrain in American social order. From past eras to present eras, this message could be comprehended. Grandma speaks to the past with her solid "Southern Hospitality" legacy. Case in point, “The old woman settled herself agreeably, evacuating her white cotton gloves and putting them up with her satchel on the rack before the back window. Her neckline and sleeves were white organdy trimmed with trim and at her neckline she had stuck a purple spread of fabric violets holding a sachet. In the event of a mishap, anybody seeing her dead on the parkway might know immediately that she was a woman." Later on she even states, "In my opportunity… youngsters were more deferential of their local states and their folks and everything else. People did right then." The grandchildren, then again, are a result of where this crevice between social cordiality and absence of control apply. In the first place of the story June Star inconsiderately remarks to her