Flannery O’Connor made her stories meaningful to her and did that by making religion a key part of the story being told. In both “ A Good Man is Hard to Find,” and “Good Country People,” O’Connor can transform her religious beliefs into a gruesome story with lessons being taught in both. O’Connor pushes her belief that those who do not follow God will be unfortunate their entire lives, and does so by telling the story of her misfortunate characters. In Flannery O'Connor's “A Good Man is Hard to Find,” and “Good Country People,” both characters “The Misfit,” Hulga,” and the “Bible Salesman” symbolize people who don’t believe in God, and the evil and karma the characters face reflect O’Connor’s personal beliefs. “Good Country People,” is a unique short story. O’Connor’s beliefs are shown through a young …show more content…
What begins as a lovely story is brilliantly flipped into a gruesome one. There is a criminal on the loose that happens to be where the family is traveling to, although the grandmother is skeptical the family decides to go anyway. The family wrecks their car as they are heading down an old dirt road. Another car coming down the road after the accident stops to make sure the people are all right. O’Connor is sure to include that the location that the family is in at this point in the story is the middle of nowhere with only one car to be seen. “The grandmother had the peculiar feeling that the bespectacled man was someone she knew.” “A Good Man is Hard to Find.” Flannery O’Connor, Page 8. The man that begins to help the family happens to be the criminal on the loose and the grandmother says something as soon as she realizes. The criminal, also known as the Misfit, seems to be threatened when the grandmother realizes who he is. O’Connor decides to make the story fascinating when it is included that the Misfit has a gun. “Pray! Jesus, you ought not to shoot a lady. I'll give you all the money I've