Reading List · Lisanne Swart
Best Flannery O’Connor Short Stories
Flannery O’Connor published two novels and two story collections before she died of lupus at thirty-nine. It was enough. She is one of the few short story writers whose influence on American fiction is genuinely comparable to Hemingway’s — not because her work resembles his, but because it opened up a territory that did not exist before her. Her method is what she called the grotesque: she takes a character who is certain of their own goodness or intelligence or superiority, places them in a situation of escalating pressure, and then delivers — through violence, through sudden humiliation, through an encounter with something they cannot explain — the moment when that certainty shatters. The darkness in her work is not nihilism. It is the opposite: she believed that grace exists, and that it arrives through the most unlikely instruments. These are the seven stories that best show what that means in practice.
By Lisanne Swart · 7 stories · Short Fiction · Updated May 2026
A Good Man Is Hard to Find
A family drives from Atlanta to Florida on a summer vacation: a grandmother, her son Bailey, his wife, and their children. The grandmother is the story’s focus — opinionated, manipulative, obsessed with her own gentility and with being recognised as a lady. A detour she engineers leads them to an encounter with an escaped convict called The Misfit. What follows is one of the most discussed endings in American short fiction: violent, ambiguous, and hinging on a single moment of human contact that O’Connor spent years explaining in lectures and letters.
Read this first and read it without knowing what happens. The story earns its ending through everything that comes before it — the grandmother’s small hypocrisies, the family’s bored irritability, the slow wrongness of the afternoon. O’Connor said that the grandmother was the story’s most fully realised character and that her final gesture was an act of grace. Whether you read it that way or not, the story stays. It is the one that explains why O’Connor matters.
Good Country People
Hulga Hopewell has a PhD in philosophy, a wooden leg, and a contempt for her cheerful, platitudinous mother and their simple rural neighbours that she makes no effort to conceal. When a Bible salesman named Manley Pointer arrives at the farm, Hulga — who believes in nothing and is proud of it — thinks she can use the encounter to demonstrate her intellectual superiority. The story is about what happens instead. It is O’Connor’s funniest story and one of her cruelest, and the final image of the Bible salesman, disappearing across the fields, is unforgettable.
Good Country People is the story that best shows O’Connor’s dark comedy. Hulga believes that her nihilism makes her clear-eyed — that she sees through the shallow optimism of everyone around her. O’Connor shows that this belief is its own form of blindness, and that intellectual pride is as vulnerable to deflation as any other kind. The reversal is perfectly constructed and the cruelty of it is completely earned. It is also, incidentally, one of the best portraits of mother-daughter irritation in American fiction.
Everything That Rises Must Converge
Julian and his mother ride a recently desegregated bus in the American South. Julian considers himself enlightened — tolerant, educated, free of his mother’s racism — and uses the bus ride to silently catalogue her failures. His mother wears a ridiculous hat. The story turns on a coincidence involving that hat and the story’s final sequence, which pivots so fast and so completely that it requires re-reading to fully absorb what has happened to Julian, and what has always been true of him.
This is the story that best shows O’Connor’s argument about liberal self-satisfaction — the specific blindness of people who believe that holding correct views exempts them from self-examination. Julian is not a villain. He is a recognisable type: the person whose sense of moral superiority over the people closest to them prevents them from seeing what is actually in front of them. The ending is devastating in part because Julian does not understand it. He may never understand it. That is the point.
Revelation
Ruby Turpin sits in a doctor’s waiting room and mentally ranks the people around her on a hierarchy of class and respectability — a hierarchy in which she and her husband Claud occupy a comfortable middle position, well above the white trash and the coloured people, well below the real quality. She is grateful to Jesus for making her who she is rather than someone else. Then a college girl across the room attacks her without warning and says something to her that Ruby cannot dismiss or forget. That night, Ruby has a vision.
Revelation is the story that most directly dramatises O’Connor’s theology — and it is also one of her funniest. Ruby Turpin’s self-congratulation is rendered with such affectionate precision that she is both ridiculous and completely recognisable. The vision at the end has been argued over for decades: is it redemptive, terrifying, or both? O’Connor said it was both. The story works equally well as a character study of a specific kind of Southern respectability and as a meditation on grace arriving through the exact mechanism most likely to shatter our self-image.
The Life You Save May Be Your Own
Mr Shiftlet arrives at the farm of an old woman and her deaf-mute daughter Lucynell. He is handy, philosophical, and entirely untrustworthy. He fixes the car. He marries the daughter. He drives away without her. The story follows his logic — his self-serving rationalizations, his grandiose sense of his own suffering — and closes on a highway in the rain with a hitchhiker and a thunderstorm and a prayer that arrives, like all of O’Connor’s grace, in the most ironic possible packaging.
Mr Shiftlet is O’Connor’s most complete portrait of a con man who has convinced himself he is a philosopher. His speech about the human heart — delivered to an old woman he is about to swindle — is both ridiculous and strangely moving, which is O’Connor’s whole method in concentrated form. The story is also the best introduction to her use of physical landscape: the road, the sky, the car, the thundercloud that closes the story are not decoration. They are doing theological work.
Parker’s Back
O.E. Parker has covered his body in tattoos, one by one, since adolescence — compelled by something he cannot name toward some completion he cannot picture. His wife Sarah Ruth is a severe Protestant who considers images of any kind idolatrous. The story follows Parker’s search for the tattoo that will finally satisfy him, which leads him to a Byzantine Christ — stern, all-seeing, with eyes that seem to demand something. He has it tattooed across his entire back. Then he goes home to show Sarah Ruth. This was the last story O’Connor completed before her death.
Parker’s Back is the most quietly extraordinary story on this list. O’Connor wrote it while she was dying, and it shows a control and a tenderness that is different from her earlier work. Parker is the only one of her central characters who arrives at something like genuine religious experience — not through humiliation or violence but through the simple act of choosing a face. The ending, in which Sarah Ruth beats his back with a broom while Parker weeps, is one of the strangest and most moving passages in American short fiction.
The Displaced Person
A Polish refugee named Mr Guizac arrives to work on Mrs McIntyre’s farm after the Second World War. He is efficient, honest, industrious — and his presence quietly dismantles the arrangements everyone else on the farm has settled into. Mrs McIntyre, the farm workers, and the local priest each respond to him differently, and the story traces the slow accumulation of resentment and inaction that leads to its final scene. At sixteen thousand words it is the longest story in the collection and the one that most resembles a novel.
The Displaced Person is O’Connor’s most politically resonant story — about how communities protect themselves from disruption by excluding the person who disrupts them, and about the specific moral failure of people who witness injustice and do nothing. It is also, like all her work, a story about grace: Mr Guizac is the most Christlike figure she ever created, which is why everyone around him wants him gone. Read it after the others. It rewards the context.
Which collection to read first
If you want to start with her strongest single collection
→ A Good Man Is Hard to Find (1955). It contains the title story, Good Country People, The Life You Save May Be Your Own, and The Displaced Person — four of the seven stories on this list. It is where O’Connor arrived fully formed.
If you want everything in one volume
→ The Complete Stories (1971). Thirty-one stories, including work from both collections plus previously uncollected pieces. It won the National Book Award posthumously and is the standard edition. If you are going to read O’Connor seriously, this is the book to own.
If you want her essays and lectures alongside the fiction
→ Mystery and Manners (1969). O’Connor was an exceptional critic of her own work and of the short story form generally. Reading her essays explains what she was trying to do in the fiction and makes the stories richer. Not an entry point, but essential context.
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