Good Things Out of Nazareth: The Uncollected Letters of Flannery O'Connor and Friends

Author:   Flannery O'Connor
Publisher:   Random House USA Inc
ISBN:  

9780525575061


Pages:   400
Publication Date:   15 October 2019
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

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Good Things Out of Nazareth: The Uncollected Letters of Flannery O'Connor and Friends


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Author:   Flannery O'Connor
Publisher:   Random House USA Inc
Imprint:   Convergent
Weight:   0.646kg
ISBN:  

9780525575061


ISBN 10:   0525575065
Pages:   400
Publication Date:   15 October 2019
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

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Reviews

In a world where correspondence disappears into the ether, these letters remind us of what is lasting; they feel solid and ground us somehow. We may never return to the time of consistent snail mail, but perhaps we can aspire to be as prophetic as those who came before us. --National Review An enticing volume for anyone anxious to hear O'Connor's voice again or eager to experience her friends' idiosyncratic voices. --Commonweal A whole new perspective on this audacious, compassionate, piercing young writer . . . These letters by [Flannery] O'Connor and her circle bring to light the impact her genius had on other writers. . . . This edifying and entertaining gathering offers a new portal onto a playful, spiritual, courageous, and indelible American master. --Booklist Good Things Out of Nazareth makes for an even richer read . . . because Dr. Alexander amplifies O'Connor's previously unpublished letters with correspondence from (and among) Caroline Gordon, Walker Percy, and others in O'Connor's wide circle of friendship. . . . Above all, Good Things Out of Nazareth--Gordon's biblical metaphor for the Southern literary renaissance, which Dr. Alexander adopts for his title--is a powerful reminder of the intensity of Flannery O'Connor's Catholic faith: an intensity that was unmarked by sentimentality, that was informed by an astonishingly broad reading in the Fathers of the Church and St. Thomas Aquinas, and that sustained her through many dark nights of the soul, both literary and physical. --First Things In Good Things Out of Nazareth The Uncollected Letters of Flannery O'Connor and Friends, Benjamin Alexander collects letters by O'Connor, Percy, Gordon, and a host of others who have had more than a little influence on the shape of 20th-century fiction as we have inherited it. By presenting the letters of more than a dozen authors and other correspondents in dialogue with O'Connor and each other, Alexander employs a technique of literary historiography in attempting to understand these authors' works and lives in communion with temporally overlapping luminaries such as older critics and younger scholarly compatriots. . . . He draws bold yet warranted judgments in his mini-introductions and keeps a running score, or play-by-play, as it were, of who responds to whom. These 'part spiritual autobiography, part literary history' headnotes evince Alexander's deep knowledge and provocative insights concerning the authors, their faith, and the politico-cultural situations on which they sometimes commented. --National Review Good Things Out of Nazareth . . . boasts the more ingenious arrangement. In fact, editor Benjamin B. Alexander used portions of the O'Connor-Gordon letters as a pillar of the collection. Spiraling out from those are a valuable assortment of uncollected or unpublished epistles from O'Connor's broader literary circles--Walker Percy and Robert Lowell among them. . . . Good Things effectively draws together disparate threads in the thought of these writers and critics so that they can be better understood together. To smooth the less intuitive flow, Alexander also provides far more editorial comment upon the letters and their context. --The FORMA Review


A whole new perspective on this audacious, compassionate, piercing young writer . . . These letters by [Flannery] O'Connor and her circle bring to light the impact her genius had on other writers. . . . This edifying and entertaining gathering offers a new portal onto a playful, spiritual, courageous, and indelible American master. --Booklist


In a world where correspondence disappears into the ether, these letters remind us of what is lasting; they feel solid and ground us somehow. We may never return to the time of consistent snail mail, but perhaps we can aspire to be as prophetic as those who came before us. --National Review An enticing volume for anyone anxious to hear O'Connor's voice again or eager to experience her friends' idiosyncratic voices. --Commonweal A whole new perspective on this audacious, compassionate, piercing young writer . . . These letters by [Flannery] O'Connor and her circle bring to light the impact her genius had on other writers. . . . This edifying and entertaining gathering offers a new portal onto a playful, spiritual, courageous, and indelible American master. --Booklist


Author Information

"Flannery O'Connor (1925-1964) was born in Savannah, Georgia. She earned her MFA at the University of Iowa, but lived most of her life in the South, where she became an anomaly among posta ""World War II authors--a Roman Catholic woman whose stated purpose was to reveal the mystery of God's grace in everyday life. Her work--novels, short stories, letters, and criticism--received a number of awards, including the National Book Award."

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