Exploring Flannery O'Connor with Mark Scarbrough

Live, In-Person & on Zoom:
Mark Scarbrough returns to OWL this Spring; leading us through 8 weeks of some of his favorite Flannery O’Connor works.
Flannery O'Connor is considered one of America's greatest fiction writers and her writing often reflects her Catholic faith, and frequently examined questions of morality and ethics. When she died in August of 1964, The New York Times called her “one of the nation’s most promising writers.”
O’Connor is now as canonical as Faulkner and Welty. More than a great writer, she’s a cultural figure: a funny lady in a straw hat, puttering among peacocks, on crutches she likened to “flying buttresses.”
Discussion Schedule:
March 14: A Good Man is Hard to Find; A Circle of Fire; and Good Country People
March 21: The Artificial N----r and The Displaced Person
March 28: Wise Blood: chapters 1 - 7
April 4: Wise Blood: chapters 8 - 14
April 18: The Violent Bear It Away: chapters 1 - 5
April 25: The Violent Bear It Away: chapters 6 - 12
May 2: Greenleaf; The Enduring Chill; and The Comforts of Home
May 9: Everything That Rises Must Converge; The Lame Shall Enter First; and Revelation
MARK SCARBROUGH is a former English Professor and author who teaches seminars on Virginia Woolf, William Faulkner and Toni Morrison. He also hosts three literary podcasts.
The library will have copies of Flannery O'Connor's works to borrow and titles are also available to download as e-books or e-audios to OWL library card holders.
Registration required for in-person attendance.