Monday, February 18, 2013

"The Devil You Know is Better Than the Devil You Don't"

For a while during my morning commute, I used to listen to multiple different podcasts of short stories. There was This American Life, Selected Shorts through PRI, and my personal favorite, the New Yorker Fiction. In this podcast, authors are invited to select a story from the magazine's archives and read it. Then the author and host would have a discussion about the story after the reading was done.

What I learned from listening to these podcasts (and also as anyone who has written a short story has probably learned) is that, with much less real estate to convey a complete narrative, every word in a short story is deliberate and needs to pack a punch. Given that my free subscription to satellite radio just ran out last week, I suspect it's time for me to get back on board with listening to my short story podcasts. There's a lot to be appreciated about an excellently written short story. And holy crap does Flannery O'Connor do this masterfully.

The actual book of A Good Man is Hard to Find consists of 10 different short stories. And after having read through them all together, there is a vein of similarities across the stories. They're all set in the south (usually Georgia) in roughly the 1940's, and all tend to have 1 character who is strong-willed, a bit of a know-it-all, often smug, and usually also cynical about religion and belief in God. These characters don't usually meet a very good end. There is a very dark, sinister, and often tragic theme that permeates the stories; as innocuous as they start out, there is often a very disturbing turn the story takes, which startled me on many occassions. The title story, A Good Man is Hard to Find, is the first story presented in the book, and needless to say, I didn't expect the crotchety Grandma, bratty kids, and ambivalent parents to meet an unfortunate end at the hands of an escaped convict. Nor did I expect a small boy to drown himself in a river in the next story. I know, heavy duty right?

But the thing about these flawed characters is that they usually come to a realization about the misguided views they've held, usually as a result of very dramatic circumstances. Oft times it's too late for them to do anything about it, but each story has a sense of mercy, salvation, and redemption for those who turn themselves over to it. The idea that there is good in even the most evil is present in the stories, and very often those who appear to be good are evil and vice versa.

Overall, I LOVED each and every one of the stories. The remind me of what brilliant writing can and should be, particularly that for short stories. How each description can tell you so much more about what is really going on and where the story is headed. They had so much more to say without saying it out loud, but the concepts weren't so far out there that I would finish reading the story thinking, "Huh? WTF was that all about?"

So on I roll to The Prince by Niccolo Machiavelli. I hope this won't torture me too much, but we'll see. I guess anticipating to not enjoy it sets me up to be pleasantly surprised, right?

Only 249 books to go. Happy Monday.

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