Summary Of A Good Man Is Hard To Find And Spunk

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Irony make things appear to be what it is not. Flannery O’Connor and Zora Neale Hurston are two ironic authors in literature. O’Connor was a devout Roman Catholic, with a southern upbringing (Whitt); whereas “Hurston is a disciple of the greatest dead white European male, authors, a connoisseur of macho braggadocio, and a shamelessly conservative Republican who scorned victimism and leftist conformism (Sailer). Both O’Connor and Hurston use irony in their short stories; however, they use it in significantly similar ways. Both “A Good Man is Hard to Find”, and “Spunk” are very ironic stories. In O’Connor’s “A Good Man is Hard to Find”, a family gets ready to vacation in Florida. The Grandmother is against going to Florida and tells the family about how there is a criminal named the Misfit is loose and is killing innocent people. She convinces the family to go visit a house from her childhood, but she gives them the wrong directions. She is too embarrassed to admit her …show more content…

Spunk uses the killing of Joe as a warning. He is showing everyone else that he gets what he wants at any cost. After killing Joe, Spunk goes on to comfort Lena, and no one dares to stop him. They were all afraid of what could happen if someone else tries to stand between Spunk and Lena. Joe thought he was going to kill Spunk and get his wife back, but Spunk ends up killing him instead. Another example of irony is when Spunk claims he was pushed onto the large blade by Joe, “He says it was Joe he done sneaked back from hell” (Meyer 711). After killing Joe and stealing his wife, Spunk thinks he is untouchable, but everything takes a twisted turn when a mysterious black bobcat comes from out of the nowhere and scares Spunk. Spunk is terrified of the bob cat, and he starts to believe that the bob cat is Joe looking for

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