Tag Archive: redemption


Notes on Flannery O’Connor’s ‘Wise Blood’ (with spoilers)

First edition of ‘Wise Blood’ published by Harcourt, Brace and Company, New York, 1952

“All comic novels that are any good must be about life and death” wrote Flannery O’Connor in her note to the second edition of her debut novel ‘Wise Blood’.  

When I first read this book I was attracted to the gothic atmosphere and the ironic , distorted images of humankind. I took it to be a satire on religious extremism, having no idea at the time that the author was a devout Catholic and that for her the slogan  ‘Jesus Saves’ was meant as a statement of fact.

Despite her unwavering belief in grace and salvation, O’Connor knew full well the criticisms against the faithful and the arguments for atheism. Instead of mounting a defence of the Catholic Church, she presents the anti-religious viewpoint through the voice of the absurdist central character Hazel Motes. He is  a deeply troubled 18 year old who returns to a deserted home town of Eastrod after being discharged from the army. All his family are dead. He is alone, rootless and faithless.

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THE DEVIL’S IN THE DETAILS

BEFORE THE DEVIL KNOWS YOU’RE DEAD directed by Sidney Lumet (USA, 2007)

before-the-devil-knowsSadly, this movie title now seems more than a little ironic.

It comes from a Irish proverb (“May you be in heaven half an hour before the devil knows you’re dead”)  and turned out to be Lumet’s swan song (he died in 2011) as well as being one of a long list of films that stand as testament to the greatness of the late Philip Seymour Hoffman.

To say that it is a story of a dysfunctional family is a massive understatement.

Hoffman plays Andy Hanson who bullies younger brother Hank (Ethan Hawke) into carrying out the botched robbery of a ‘mom and pop’ store and Albert Finney is the overbearing father who discovers the horrible truth about his sons. Continue reading

SIN, FORGIVENESS AND PADDING

MAY WE BE FORGIVEN by A.M. Homes (Granta Books, 2012)

For the first part of this novel I was sure I was going to give it a maximum five-star rating. By the end I wondered if four stars was too generous.

It opens at breakneck speed as a succession of bizarre and shocking incidents befall the main character, But then it’s as if someone pulls the plug on a white knuckle rollercoaster  ride and downgrades us to a safer merry-go-round instead.

The novel, written as a first person narrative, follows 365 days in the life of Harry Silver, a university professor of history specialising in the Nixon years.

To call this an eventful year, beginning and ending on Thanksgiving Day, would be a massive understatement. Continue reading