Flannery O'Connor
Flannery O'Connor (March 25, 1925 - August 3, 1964) was an American author. She was born in Savannah, Georgia.Considered an important voice in American literature, O'Connor wrote 2 novels, 32 short stories, plus a number of reviews and commentaries.
Ms. O'Connor, in her critical writings, insisted on a Catholic interpretation of her works. As such, and because of her relatively small literary output, she remains a minor writer in the American canon, but one hugely talented, with much unfulfilled potential due to her early death.
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Her father, Edward O'Connor, was diagnosed with lupus in 1937; he died on the first of February, 1941. Mary Flannery, the couple's only child, was devastated, and rarely spoke of him in later years.
Ms. O'Connor attended Peabody High School, from which she graduated in 1942. She entered Georgia State College, where she majored in English and Sociology, the latter a perspective she satirized effectively in novels such as The Violent Bear It Away.
In 1946 Flannery O'Connor was accepted into the prestigious Iowa Writer's Workshop.
In 1949 O'Connor met and eventually accepted an invitation to stay with Robert Fitzgerald (trans. of Greek epic plays and poems, including Oedipus Rex and both the Odyssey and the Iliad) and his wife, Sally, in rural Connecticut.
In 1951 she was diagnosed with lupus. She died August 3, 1964 at Baldwin County Hospital and was buried in Milledgeville, Georgia.
O'Connor lived on a large farm where she raised and nurtured some 100 peacocks, and images of peacocks are often found on her books.
Biography
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