Between the House and the Chicken Yard: Brad Gooch on Flannery O’Connor

The photo above is me, reading Brad Gooch’s biography of Flannery O’Connor (appropriately titled Flannery), and my yawning dog. She’s a tough critic. Anyway, I’ve been a fan of Flannery O’Connor since I first read her story “The Life You Save May Be Your Own” back when I was in high school, and as I got older and read more of her work, my appreciation of her grew. In fact, on my personal list of Date Book-Talk Gone Wrong is the following snippet:

Him: What kind of books do you like?
Me: A lot of different kinds. I just read a short story by Flannery O’Connor this morning, actually. Do you like Flannery O’Connor?
Him: Oh, that Irish guy? He’s really good.
Me: Right.

I haven’t read everything she’s written, but I’ve liked everything by her that I’ve read. I knew a little bit about her life — from Georgia, liked birds, died of lupus — but I didn’t know very much, so I was interested in learning more about her through her biography.

As O’Connor herself said, “As for biographies, there won’t be any biographies of me because, for only one reason, lives spent between the house and the chicken yard do not make exciting copy.” This bit is quoted at the front of the book. Is it meant to be an ironic flourish? I’m not sure, because it turns out that Flannery was right: her biography is not an exciting book. Her life story is not full of wild escapades or exotic travel or tragic love affairs. It is instead a life story removed from the things we tend to think of when we think of excitement. Yet unlike the creator of this cartoon review of the book, I find I don’t have a problem with that. Flannery is not an exciting book, but it is an interesting one.

Gooch’s biography gleans many details from Flannery’s letters to friends, and others from the personal recollections of those around her. Through the book, a portrait emerges of an intimidatingly smart woman with a slyly dark sense of humor who was dedicated to her faith and her craft. The more interesting bits of the book aren’t the overarching bits of narrative (she went to mass, she went to Iowa, she went to Yaddo), but the places where we see the genesis and evolution of some of her work, and where we learn about her method. Turns out that Flannery O’Connor was an incredibly disciplined worker with a penchant for revising the hell out of her writing. Besides, if you’ve ever wondered where someone comes up with a story about a traveling Bible salesman who steals a girl’s prosthetic leg, now you can find out.

For me, the fact that Flannery O’Connor didn’t live a flashy, exciting life is fine, because by reading her biography, I got to learn more about how I writer I admire wrote, and that is worth the time. I’m not sure I would recommend it to someone who wasn’t already interested in O’Connor’s writing, as it’s not exactly what I would call a gripping good-time read, but even so, the book is very well-written and I enjoyed the time I spent with it.

Having long appreciated Flannery O’Connor’s humor (especially the uncomfortable, “am I allowed to laugh at this, really?” kind) and her ability to write masterful stories that never forget the people in them are people, I think that more than anything, reading Flannery made me want to pull her work back off the shelf, and now that I know more about it, read it with fresh eyes.

10 Responses

  1. Nobody employes a better
    Nobody employes a better combination of graphics, wit, intelligence, and humanity than Jamelah Earle. The photo is beautiful, the cartoon link is cool! and the review itslef is lucidly germane, perhaps even elegant.

    And, this goes to show that being a good writer doesn’t require drunken escapades and brushes with insanity. Unless they just want to.

  2. That cartoon-review link is
    That cartoon-review link is especially cool in light of yesterday’s discussion of the first cartoon-review in the NYTBR. I think this cartoon review beats both Alison Bechdel and Ward Sutton.

  3. This might sound creepy, but
    This might sound creepy, but your foot looks really cute on that picture. Welcome to the Internet!

  4. Bill — Thanks.

    Levi — Yes,
    Bill — Thanks.

    Levi — Yes, I think this particular cartoon review is the most entertaining. Though it makes me want to do all my future reviews in cartoon form. Except I can’t really draw. Alas.

    CIP(PANS) — Oh stop, before my foot gets arrogant.

  5. Jamelah – you should’ve
    Jamelah – you should’ve written the NYT review. Yours is shorter and stronger.

    I think it was O’Connor who was asked, ‘Do the Universities stifle writers?” She responded, “Not nearly enough of them.”

    One of my favorite O’Connor short stories is “The Artificial Nigger.” Check it out if you haven’t already. The insight of woman into the very soul of the rural southerner is astounding. Choreographer Bill T. Jones created a dance around this story, with a man and a woman alternating as readers. (Also, it gave Bill T. a sneaky way to get lots of liberal white people to say the N-word!)

  6. NYT shorter and stronger, are
    NYT shorter and stronger, are we still talkin’ feet and creepy the allegedly Nigerian internet scammer.
    The foot the duvet the dog and a dove
    Went to sea in a beautiful peagreen novel
    I’ll believe it, this is litkicks after all.

  7. The duvet, the hand(right I
    The duvet, the hand(right I think), the book, the head with the hair, the Bette Davis eyes, the dog and the dove afloat on an ice blue sea.
    The photograph is almost a chapter from Yann Martel’s; Life of Pi.

  8. I remember Flannery O’Connor
    I remember Flannery O’Connor coming to Troy State College in 1964 or 5, giving a lecture, then meeting with the English majors and our professors for a time following the formal presentation. She was most gracious, answering sophomoric questions with a gentleness that belied her talent. A professor asked,”In the story “Everything That Rises Must Converge” a character wore a black hat.What is the significance of the hat?” She replied, satisfying all of us who had endured the professor,”The purpose of the hat was to cover his head.”

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Litkicks will turn 30 years old in the summer of 2024! We can’t believe it ourselves. We don’t run as many blog posts about books and writers as we used to, but founder Marc Eliot Stein aka Levi Asher is busy running two podcasts. Please check out our latest work!