Wise Blood - Flannery O'Connor BOOK REVIEW

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 23 июл 2023
  • Video Sponsored by Ridge. Check them out here: ridge.com/BETTERTHANFOOD
    Use Code “BETTERTHANFOOD” for 10% off your order”
    BUY HERE:
    amzn.to/44YAlwq
    SUPPORT / PATREON:
    / booksarebetterthanfood
    "SOME ASPECTS OF THE GROTESQUE IN SOUTHERN FICTION"
    Essay by Flannery O'Connor:
    bscc.instructure.com/courses/...
    INSTAGRAM: @booksarebetterthanfood
    / booksarebetterthanfood
    MUG:
    www.zazzle.com/better_than_fo...
    -----------------------
    PATREON INFO:
    For $5+ per video Patrons you'll receive (in addition to all below):
    Entered in the Book & Coffee Jar
    For $1+ per video Patrons you'll get access to:
    Patron-Only Reviews
    All Reviews Ad-Free
    Discord Channel
    Better Than Friday Newsletter (5 things I'm interested in sent to you every Friday)
    -------------------------------
    PATRON ONLY REVIEWS:
    The Myth of Sisyphus - Albert Camus
    / myth-of-sisyphus-80534135
    H.P. Lovecraft - The Call of Cthulhu (Halloween Special)
    / call-of-cthulhu-74055549
    Hamlet: Poem Unlimited by Harold Bloom
    / 66203438
    10 Books to Be Read 2022:
    / 63010254
    Train Dreams by Denis Johnson
    / 60574022
    The Necrophiliac by Gabrielle Wittkop - Halloween 2021
    / 58073911
    Death in Midsummer by Yukio Mishima
    / 55759685
    Holy the Firm by Annie Dillard
    / 53139833
    The Key by Junichiro Tanizaki
    / 51134117
    Platforms by Nina Power
    / 48914140
    Consider This by Chuck Palahniuk
    / 45465524
    Bookshelf Tour 2020:
    Part 1: / 41287302
    Part 2: / 42817306
    Part 3: / 43783138
    The Blind Owl by Sadegh Hedayat
    / 38823138
    Margery Kempe by Robert Glück
    / 38645694
    Transparent Things by Vladimir Nabokov
    / 37527267
    The Lover by Marguerite Duras
    / 35574016
    11 Books to be read in 2020:
    / 33921584
    Atomic Habits by James Clear
    / 32697977
    Too Loud a Solitude by Bohumil Hrabal
    / 30969884
    The 48 Laws of Power by Robert Greene
    / 29515320
    Reading is Expensive (A Rant)
    / 29065141
    White by Bret Easton Ellis
    / 26771749
    A Room on the Garden Side by Ernest Hemingway
    / 21573550
    The Return by Roberto Bolaño
    / 21019229
    Darkness Visible by William Styron
    / 20276630
    "Blindness", an essay by Jorge Luis Borges
    / 19529985
    The Alligators by John Updike
    / 18428537
    The Diaries of Adam and Eve by Mark Twain
    / 17281418
    Animal Crackers in My Soup by Charles Bukowski
    / 16924023
    A Very Old Man with Enormous Wings by Gabriel Garcia Marquez
    / 16133547

Комментарии • 101

  • @Zen_Ali_123
    @Zen_Ali_123 11 месяцев назад +8

    Flannery is in my pantheon.
    "When in Rome, do as you done in Milledgeville."

    • @Zen_Ali_123
      @Zen_Ali_123 11 месяцев назад +2

      Now you gotta reread The Violent Bear It Away

    • @theangryambisextress
      @theangryambisextress 14 дней назад

      ik this comment is directed toward the creator but everyone who reads it better do this too. (fortunately i’m already in the middle of it lmaoo also that “when in rome” has me dead as a not so great uncle)

  • @palodine1
    @palodine1 11 месяцев назад +30

    I've read this twice and ready for a third. Seen the John Houston film adaptation twice, ready for a third. Flannery is the cream of the crop of southern gothic.

    • @rustyshackelford934
      @rustyshackelford934 11 месяцев назад +5

      I've only read it the once, but I definitely need to go in for a second. I loved it, but was just absolutely baffled at times lol. It went every direction I didn't expect it too. O'Connor was a genius author, particular of southern gothic, which is some of my favorite. Truly one of a kind. It's such a shame her life was cut so early, just when she was really getting going. But it's impressive the impact she left on literature, with how little she had published.

  • @benjaminkennedy5083
    @benjaminkennedy5083 11 месяцев назад +5

    I really liked The Violent Bear It Away

  • @FisherKing9633
    @FisherKing9633 11 месяцев назад +14

    Similar ideas appear in The Violent Bear It Away, but to my opinion, in a much darker fashion. Both are excellent, but I read Violent Bear it Away at a time in my life where I was sliding definitively into atheism. And I found it, and Graham Greene’s Brighton Rock to be very startling, very dark and said more profound truths about faith than anything by any saint.

    • @charlestaylor8624
      @charlestaylor8624 11 месяцев назад

      My former, southern writer Pat Little dog, said it's too bad she never had children. It would have changed her and mitigated the darkness.

    • @charlestaylor8624
      @charlestaylor8624 11 месяцев назад +1

      You have helped me understand Flannery. She seems to put the Christian message in the most unchristian people.

  • @mudgetheexpendable
    @mudgetheexpendable 11 месяцев назад +5

    The thumbnail on this review is PITCH-PERFECT! That expression....
    I loved this book so very much and am glad you did too.

  • @hsialakas
    @hsialakas 3 месяца назад +1

    John Kennedy Toole’s, who wrote A Confederacy of Dunces (which I highly recommend), favourite author. I think I read somewhere he went to go visit her home before he killed himself.

  • @salliesones9506
    @salliesones9506 3 месяца назад +1

    I am experiencing this book for the first time. Actually, listening to it on Audible and the narrator is amazing! I have caught the humor due to the narrator...so engaging...there are parts that annoyed me but that is due to emotions as a reader (hopefully everyone can understand that). Thank you for this review because you shed some light on some aspects of the story that I was missing or needed more info on.

  • @juanpisukan
    @juanpisukan 11 месяцев назад +4

    Maan, you have such a good channel, keep going.

  • @KSilvaB
    @KSilvaB 11 месяцев назад +2

    Min 14:04 - "The book is a haunting nightmare comedy, like life." - LOVE THIS!!!

  • @MagnumInnominandum
    @MagnumInnominandum 11 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you for another fascinating read I should get to. I really enjoy you verbal style in your video review if these works. For the average monolog your speech is definitely too fast, but the passion, the rhythm of your adlib narrative drives me. I feel your enthusiasm for these books. Makes me want to partake of these victuals. Thx

  • @pelodelperro
    @pelodelperro 11 месяцев назад +4

    Thank you for this! Spot on review on one of my favorite books and authors. I still think her masterpiece is The Violent Bear It Away, but Wise Blood is certainly a profoundly engaging and disturbing read. Keep up the good work, you channel is a gem.

  • @allesvergaengliche
    @allesvergaengliche 11 месяцев назад +1

    Looking forward to your review of The Heart is a Lonely Hunter. Blew me away when I read it a couple months back.

  • @rishabhaniket1952
    @rishabhaniket1952 11 месяцев назад +6

    I read this far too early in my life to fully comprehend it's themes and was left pretty depressed and horrified by the last page. I might give this another go after all.

  • @Amanda-yo2cd
    @Amanda-yo2cd 11 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you. Brilliant as always.

  • @tbw6652
    @tbw6652 11 месяцев назад +4

    Everything in me is hoping you'll redo your review of Blood Meridian. I know this will very likely never happen, or at least if it does, not any time soon. But I'm in the middle of copying out the book by hand, and it's something that's crossed my mind a few times while doing so.

  • @thebooknitter
    @thebooknitter 11 месяцев назад +1

    I loved The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter so I know this is for me. great review Cliff

  • @timkjazz
    @timkjazz 11 месяцев назад +2

    Great review, great, great review, one of your very best and that's saying a lot because you are the premier book reviewer online or in print.

  • @CrazyKrafty
    @CrazyKrafty 11 месяцев назад +4

    I discovered O'Connor after learning of the "Southern Gothic" genre after reading McCarthy and Faulkner and fell in love instantly. It's a shame her body of work is relatively small but all of it is brilliant. Hazel Motes is possibly my favorite fiction character of all time.

  • @danielyoung5137
    @danielyoung5137 9 месяцев назад +4

    I attended an Evangelical college and read AGMIHTF in a class. The teacher asked by a show of hands how many thought it was a “Christian” story. My hand was the only one raised. The teacher turned purple, the others were aghast and l was surprised. Class was dismissed - except for me. I was given an “A”.Been a fan ever since.

    • @AlecEburhard
      @AlecEburhard 7 месяцев назад

      What’s AGMIHTF stand for?

    • @danielyoung5137
      @danielyoung5137 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@AlecEburhard Initials for “A Good Man Is Hard To Find”.

  • @SerWhiskeyfeet
    @SerWhiskeyfeet 10 месяцев назад +3

    My favorite book. I know some are better but this one is my favorite.

  • @Szeth_
    @Szeth_ 11 месяцев назад +6

    Literally just finished reading Wise Blood yesterday and I’m currently about 40 pages into The Violent Bear It Away. This is so bizarre, but yes great video as always! Hazel’s neurotic character sort of reminds me of an MC from Dostoyevsky. The book is absolutely enjoyable

    • @domvrazel1171
      @domvrazel1171 11 месяцев назад +3

      The Violent Bear It Away is stunning. Absolutely in my top ten.

    • @Szeth_
      @Szeth_ 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@domvrazel1171 Yea i’m loving it so far, i think i’ll like it slightly more than wise blood. i’m eager to see where this gothic classic leads me

  • @jacquesciesla2550
    @jacquesciesla2550 11 месяцев назад +5

    Ironically, just finished reading this myself about a week or two ago. Truly brilliant writing from O’Conner. To my mind, she is one of the very few American authors whom tackle religion and religious devotion with a seriousness, darkness, and honesty that I think is worthy of the subject. Brilliant review as always!!

  • @ronaldwilliams2456
    @ronaldwilliams2456 11 месяцев назад +1

    Great review! Read this years ago and it blew my mind. She does indeed put me in mind of a Southern Nathanael West.

  • @turk-money
    @turk-money 11 месяцев назад +2

    hey man thanks for posting

  • @473mishke
    @473mishke 13 дней назад

    I'm reading Wise Blood right now after years of not reading Flannery. Her writing is as bright and vibrant as religious iconography and lurks with mystery . I love her. And yes, she is hilarious!

  • @jojohairee9987
    @jojohairee9987 11 месяцев назад +2

    Nice review! Are you planning on reading haruki murakami soon?

  • @TheMikenanners
    @TheMikenanners 11 месяцев назад +4

    One of the best. Her second book is even better.

  • @thJune-ze7dn
    @thJune-ze7dn 11 месяцев назад +4

    I loved The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter, and I'm ashamed to realise that I haven't explored the rest of her work yet. This sounds terrific, thank you so much for the video.

    • @zorothe9th
      @zorothe9th 11 месяцев назад +1

      That was written by Carson McCullers

    • @thJune-ze7dn
      @thJune-ze7dn 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@zorothe9th Ahhh frick, you're completely right, I must have mixed them up in my brain. Thank you for the correction.

  • @jonathangomez5131
    @jonathangomez5131 11 месяцев назад +1

    Read Wise Blood last year from here, my Argentinian Patagonia, and loved it. It's fresh to read a Catholic author from a country distant from that tradition.

  • @Calcprof
    @Calcprof 11 месяцев назад +2

    A great favorite of mine.There is a wonderful John Huston verion of this. Not exactly the novel, but wonderful in its own way.

  • @szabolcsmezei4088
    @szabolcsmezei4088 11 месяцев назад +2

    Thanks, as a fan of Cave and the writing (not necessarily the stories) of McCarthy, I will give this a go.

  • @Thomasfboyle
    @Thomasfboyle 11 месяцев назад +1

    Word on Fire ministries just put out a new Flannery O’Connor collection!

  • @BetterThanFoodBookReviews
    @BetterThanFoodBookReviews  11 месяцев назад +4

    A huge thanks to Ridge for sending me these wallets and supporting the channel! Here’s the site if you want to check them out! > ridge.com/BETTERTHANFOOD

  • @franciscprager2425
    @franciscprager2425 11 месяцев назад +2

    Great Review!

  • @ashtonpaul9666
    @ashtonpaul9666 11 месяцев назад +1

    Cliff could you do a review on Nick Land, would love to hear your thoughts!

  • @zetsub0u115
    @zetsub0u115 11 месяцев назад +2

    Found your channel since I started 2666 by Bolano recently and fell in love with your content 🙏

    • @fourtreemouths
      @fourtreemouths 4 месяца назад

      what’d you think of 2666? that whole middle section is brutal(ly long)

  • @ss-gr8lt
    @ss-gr8lt 11 месяцев назад +2

    good review man

  • @Ozgipsy
    @Ozgipsy 4 месяца назад

    At cool, I have this. I must’ve seen this review before.
    I look forward to it. 👍

  • @SerWhiskeyfeet
    @SerWhiskeyfeet 10 месяцев назад +1

    10:37 very nicely said

  • @davidaasen5192
    @davidaasen5192 11 месяцев назад +2

    Great review 👌🏻 And if you’ve only seen the movie The Night of the Hunter and haven’t read the original novel by Davis Grubb, you really should. It is excellent 🙏🏻

  • @geronimo8159
    @geronimo8159 11 месяцев назад +2

    A very contemporary horror is Cliff losing his mustache.

  • @zenape619
    @zenape619 11 месяцев назад +2

    Good lord I love O'Connor. Her house Andalusia is a cool place to tour if you ever get a chance.
    I used to go out drinking and shooting guns in the woods nearby.
    I feel like she's the Georgia Lovecraft: misanthropic, funny, obsessed with the dark, alien forces that would fry our minds if we ever tried to comprehend them.
    Did you see the Mercer House in Savannah?

  • @zitrandy
    @zitrandy 11 месяцев назад +2

    A good man is hard to find?! A hard man is good to find!!

  • @paranoidmyself
    @paranoidmyself 5 месяцев назад

    Read it because of this video and oh boy I’m glad I did it!

  • @thefirstact86
    @thefirstact86 11 месяцев назад

    Is that Solenoid on your shelf? If so, would be interested in your take, Cliff. Also, is The Family of Pascual Duarte on your radar? Hard rec and, I suspect, right up your black-as-pitch alley.

  • @marcelhidalgo1076
    @marcelhidalgo1076 11 месяцев назад +1

    Hope you review Death in Venice by Thomas Mann and Knee-deep in Wonder by April Reynolds (another southern gothic)

  • @danecobain
    @danecobain 11 месяцев назад

    I've never read Flannery O'Connor but I keep on meaning to!

    • @pelodelperro
      @pelodelperro 11 месяцев назад

      You're in for a treat!

  • @user-mf1rz9mn3l
    @user-mf1rz9mn3l 11 месяцев назад +2

    You are right, Flannery was humorous, also have you read the heart is a lonely hunter? Carson McCullers and Flannery hated each other

  • @playermartin286
    @playermartin286 11 месяцев назад +1

    Are you ever going to read some Edward St. Aubyn?

  • @bobcabot
    @bobcabot 11 месяцев назад

    ...is it? maybe, but Clint shoot "Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil" in Savannah and is about to shoot again there soon and the movie gets now a very different spin due to Spacey´s current run...

  • @Monowhite
    @Monowhite Месяц назад

    Enoch’s hatred/jealousy for animals cracked me up.

  • @navsquid32
    @navsquid32 3 месяца назад

    Just read it, and was floored.

  • @AlencarFaulkner
    @AlencarFaulkner 11 месяцев назад +2

    Fantastic review of a masterpiece of fiction. I prefer The Violent Bear it Away, a novel that almost ruined fiction for me. O'Connor's writing is better than many lauded laureates, in my opinion. She was truly special. I admire her immensely. The last great Catholic fiction writer.

    • @barrymoore4470
      @barrymoore4470 4 месяца назад +1

      I think Anthony Burgess would be a contender for that last distinction. Not necessarily better than O'Connor, but great in his own right, and survived O'Connor by almost thirty years.

    • @AlencarFaulkner
      @AlencarFaulkner 4 месяца назад

      @@barrymoore4470 I didn't even knew Burgess was Catholic. I assumed he was Anglican. Stylistically, I've a hard time liking first-person narratives. Burgess seems fond of the first-person mode. I just fell in love with O'Connor's style and voice and narratives. I was an adolescent New Atheist arrogantly making fun of "backward" theistic "stupidity". Even after growing out of it I would backslide into my prickly ways. Flannery O'Connor didn't make me into a devout Catholic or much of a theist. But intelligent and talented people like her help me stave off my hubris. Her patience and perseverance and humility and faith is something to admire.

  • @martinhall932
    @martinhall932 9 месяцев назад +1

    Great book... and great movie based on it

  • @mattmen
    @mattmen 11 месяцев назад +1

    Perchance do you have an account on the ex-birdie app?

  • @Liisa3139
    @Liisa3139 11 месяцев назад +1

    I'm not into anything goth, but this sounded interesting. Enjoyed your commentary very much.

    • @kurtfox4944
      @kurtfox4944 11 месяцев назад

      I am not sure where "gothic" comes from in the thumbnail, Not a word I would use to describe this.

  • @jackpreiss1031
    @jackpreiss1031 4 месяца назад

    Strangely she reminds me of Waugh. Funny & dark and so damn good.

  • @abnormaniac
    @abnormaniac 3 месяца назад

    Review over. I am just gonna buy it.

  • @captain_eclectic
    @captain_eclectic 11 месяцев назад +1

    One of the best.

  • @schumanhuman
    @schumanhuman 11 месяцев назад +1

    Her 2nd novel 'The Violent Bear It Away' is also derived from several short stories, but unlike 'Wise blood' I don't think it hangs together well at all and the best moments are best read in their original short story form. Though I do like Wise blood I'd rank at least half a dozen of her short stories above it.

    • @barrymoore4470
      @barrymoore4470 4 месяца назад +1

      Yes, I think "A Good Man is Hard to Find" is likely her masterpiece, and certainly one of the great English-language short stories of the twentieth century.

  • @dwightkschrute80
    @dwightkschrute80 3 месяца назад

    I loved this novel! The characters are all wonderfully eccentric and interesting. The world lost a great literary mind when O'Connor passed away.

  • @1dudeleek
    @1dudeleek 11 месяцев назад +1

    Bedankt

  • @scp240
    @scp240 4 дня назад

    Great review, I enjoyed it more than the book. Actually without this review I don’t think I would have a clue what the book is about. There is something deeply nihilistic about the characters in this novel and I suspect the author saw this in herself and others. It might be worth mentioning that not only do Hazel and Enoch adopt false gods they also each commit murder. And the people they kill are in a way mirror images of themselves.

  • @BigPhilly15
    @BigPhilly15 11 месяцев назад +3

    Solid analysis, especially regarding mankind’s religious impulse directed in sometimes perverse ways.
    As a Catholic, I can tell you O’Connor and Tolkien are practically canonized.

  • @r.s.9861
    @r.s.9861 11 месяцев назад +1

    Flannery ❤

  • @fookyoo69
    @fookyoo69 11 месяцев назад

    Entering his Tim the toolman Taylor era

  • @ichirofakename
    @ichirofakename 11 месяцев назад +1

    Not gonna watch this as I have already read the book. Just dropped in to say IMHO the movie is even better than the book, which is really something coming from this O'Connor fan.

  • @IndustrialBonecraft
    @IndustrialBonecraft 11 месяцев назад

    That book is a head trip. Just weird, but pretty cool.

  • @kylestclair471
    @kylestclair471 11 месяцев назад

    Great Review! ps: I ordered your mug, they sent me the wrong one...

  • @Nora_M.Byrne88
    @Nora_M.Byrne88 5 месяцев назад

    Damn😔 sadly I just finished reading it (based on your words in the 2023 favs) and I hated every second of it😭 it was a true struggle..I don't know if it was the translation but.. quite sad

  • @buster9106
    @buster9106 10 месяцев назад

    I'm a third of the way through this book and I just want to throw in the towel. I just don't care about the characters or what happens to them.

  • @dennis-1983
    @dennis-1983 6 месяцев назад

    Springsteen loved FOC.

    • @barrymoore4470
      @barrymoore4470 4 месяца назад

      You can discern her influence on his song "Nebraska".

  • @baslielgugsa9259
    @baslielgugsa9259 11 месяцев назад

    where the stache go man?

  • @kurtfox4944
    @kurtfox4944 11 месяцев назад +1

    I don't think I heard you mention names. Names mean a Lot:
    _Hazel Motes_. Haze is to see unclearly. Mote - as in the biblical reference Matthew 7:3-5 King James Version 3 "And why beholdest thou the mote that is in thy brother's eye, but considerest not the beam that is in thine own eye? " Q: How do you remove the mote from your eye? A: read the ending.
    _Blind Asa Hawkes_... well, redistribute the spacing to be 'blind as a hawk'... note the tongue-in-cheek comedy
    _Sabbath Lily Hawkes_ - Sabbath - as in take a day of rest from religion. Lily is a flower, symbolic meaning of fertility, purity (as in the 15 yr old virgin), Hawkes - sharp-eyed, watchful, and perhaps vicious .
    _Onnie Jay Holy_ - "Onnie Jay" is pig-Latin for Johnnie. is he holy? nah, but is he a "john" taking satisfaction in the prostitution (selling) of religion? sure thing.
    _Hoover Shoats_ - Hoover as in vacuum - it sucks. Shoats are small pigs. suckling pig. He is the 'false prophet' of the scammer OJ Holy, and siphons/sucks off some of the earnings.
    _Enoch Emery_ - guessing here, but Enoch is an apocryphal text of the bible which tells the story of why some angels fell from heaven (mirroring the story of Haze), an explanation of why the Genesis flood (or in this case, blinding) was morally necessary. Enoch is apocryphal or false (as in what Enoch does is false to Haze's Church Without Christ because he tries to introduce the mummified Christ substitute). Emery is a fine-grained impure corundum used for grinding and polishing; he (who is impure) that polishes Haze into who he becomes?

  • @bobcabot
    @bobcabot 11 месяцев назад

    shot! sry...

  • @Joma93
    @Joma93 11 месяцев назад

    I'll take first.

  • @majestycrush
    @majestycrush 11 месяцев назад

    If you don’t review Don Quixote I’m unsubscribing.

  • @billypilgrim1
    @billypilgrim1 11 месяцев назад +1

    I'm going to sound incredibly ignorant but I always thought Flannery O'Connor was a man.