Read Flannery Online

Authors: Brad Gooch

Tags: #BIO000000

Flannery (61 page)

289
“inordinate affection”: FOC to Betty Hester, May 5, 1962,
CW,
1162.

289
“had wonderful things to say”: Robert Fitzgerald, “Introduction,”
Everything That Rises,
xxiii.

289
“25% Bumbling Boys”: FOC to Maryat Lee, April 17, 1957,
HB,
215.

289
“intent upon it”: Robert Fitzgerald, “Introduction,”
Everything That Rises,
xxiii.

289
“unhappy combinations”: FOC, “The Fiction Writer and His Country,”
CW,
802.

289
“To the hard of hearing”: Ibid., 806.

289
“score”: Robert Fitzgerald, “Introduction,”
Everything That Rises,
xxiii.

290
“Quite soon”: Elizabeth Bishop, “Flannery O’Connor, 1925–1964,”
New York Review of Books
3, no. 4 (October 8, 1964): 21.

290
“I sat down with a six pack”: Cash,
Flannery O’Connor,
240.

290
“I tried reading them aloud”: Louise H. Abbot, “Remembering Flannery,”
Flannery O’Connor Bulletin
23 (1994–95): 61.

290
“I am very glad”: FOC to Louise Abbot, February 27, 1957,
HB,
205.

291
“we would have a few beers”: Louise Abbot to Maryat Lee, January 19, 1977, private collection.

291
“very expressive”: Abbot, “Remembering Flannery,” 63.

291

You
stay here”: Ibid., 65.

291
“famous writer”: Ibid., 63.

292
“where your treasure”: Ibid., 65.

292
“What in the wurld-d”: Ibid., 66.

292
“The following is good”: FOC to Maryat Lee, March 10, 1957,
CW,
1027.

293
“intense manner”: Donald Richie, letter to the author, October 15, 2007.

293
“bisexual”: Robert E. Lee, in discussion with the author, May 2, 2004; Fran Belin, in discussion with the author, November 12, 2004.

293
“Oh Flannery”: Maryat Lee to FOC [n.d., late May 1957], copies in FOC Collection, GCSU.

293
“Everything has to be diluted”: FOC to Maryat Lee, June 9, 1957,
HB,
225.

293
“I am not to be got rid of”: FOC to Maryat Lee, October 8, 1957,
CW,
1045.

293
“The Enduring Chill”: The story was published in
Harper’s Bazaar
91, July 1958, and was the fourth story in
Everything That Rises Must Converge.

294
“a closet with a toilet”: FOC, “The Enduring Chill,”
CW,
552.

294
“a play about Negroes”: Ibid., 551.

294
“suffered my remarks”: Lee, “Flannery, 1957,” 43.

294
“the orthodoxy”: FOC to Maryat Lee, January 9, 1957,
CW,
1020.

294
“But — the last paragraph”: Maryat Lee to FOC, July 9, 1958, GCSU.

294
“reminds me of my character”: FOC to Maryat Lee, May 6, 1959,
HB,
331.

294
“Wishing for an icicle”: Maryat Lee to FOC, August 22, 1958, GCSU.

294
“the pseudo-literary&theological”: FOC to Betty Hester, March 7, 1958,
HB,
271.

295
“theology in modern literature”: FOC to Father James H. McCown, Decem-ber 29, 1957,
CW,
1057.

295
“She really bore down”: Jean Cash, “Milledgeville 1957–1960: O’Connor’s ‘Pseudo-Literary & Theological Gatherings,”
Flannery O’Connor Bulletin
18 (1989): 25.

295
“not particularly scintillating”: Cash, “Milledgeville 1957–1960,” 20–21.

295
“Maryat read us a play”: Mary Barbara Tate, in discussion with the author, June 3, 2004.

295
“was doing anything”: Ted R. Spivey,
Flannery O’Connor: The Woman, the Thinker, the Visionary
(Macon, Ga.: Mercer University Press, 1955), 84.

295
“to show his little boy”: FOC to John Hawkes, July 27, 1958,
CW,
1075.

296
“My father tempted me”: Christopher Dickey, e-mail to the author, January 17, 2005.

296
“a black halter”: FOC to Cecil Dawkins, April 14, 1958,
CW,
1069.

296
“plowed all over the yard”: Ibid., 1068.

296
“gracious”: Katherine Anne Porter, “Gracious Greatness,”
Esprit: Journal of Thought and Opinion
8, no. 1 (University of Scranton, Scranton, Pa., Winter 1964): 50.

CHAPTER NINE: EVERYTHING THAT RISES

297
“holy exhaustion”: FOC to Sally and Robert Fitzgerald, November 4, 1957,
CW,
1048.

297
“will of iron”: Ibid., February 26, 1958,
CW,
1064.

298
“I bet that’ll be real”: Ibid., November 4, 1957,
CW,
1048.

298
“7 into 17”: FOC to Betty Hester, December 14, 1957,
CW,
1056.

298
“Baloney Castle”: FOC to Ashley Brown, April 14, 1958,
HB,
277.

298
“Left for two minutes”: FOC to Sally and Robert Fitzgerald, February 26, 1958,
CW,
1064.

298
“where we were going”: FOC to Betty Hester, April 4, 1958,
CW,
1067.

298
“my cousin is certainly”: FOC to Sally and Robert Fitzgerald, November 4, 1957,
CW,
1048.

299
“Last Will”: “Last Will and Testament of Mary Flannery O’Connor,” April 18, 1958, GCSU.

299
“She is reading the Lourds”: FOC to Betty Hester, November 16, 1957,
CW,
1049–50.

299
“like Mr. Head and Nelson”: FOC to Maryat Lee, November 10, 1957, GCSU.

299
“I am properly back”: FOC to Robert Giroux, April 17, 1958,
HB,
278.

300
“our new important”: Roger Straus to Silvio Senigallia, April 22, 1958, FSG.

300
On spring days: The description of the Fitzgerald villa is taken from W. A. Sessions, “Sally Fitzgerald 1916–2000: The Gratitude Is Ours,”
Cheers!
8,
no. 1 (Spring/Summer 2000).

300
“wonderful”: FOC to Ashley Brown, May 26, 1958,
CW,
1072.

300–301
“Instead of seeing”: Ibid.

301
“almost unreadable”: Gabrielle Rolin, letter to author, September 26, 2007.

301
“She said to me”: Sally Fitzgerald, “The Invisible Father,”
Christianity and Literature
47, no. 1 (Autumn 1997): 7.

302
“clip-joint”: FOC to William Sessions, May 15, 1958,
CW,
1071.

302
“Aquéro”: Ruth Harris,
Lourdes: Body and Spirit in the Secular Age
(New York: Viking, 1999), 5.

302
“a hemorrhage of bad taste”: Ibid., 173.

302
“the religious goods stores”: FOC to Ashley Brown, May 26, 1958,
CW,
1072.

302
“nowhere have I seen”: Harris,
Lourdes,
339.

302
“heart that never stops”:
The Official Guide of the Sanctuary,
Sanctuaires Notre-Dame de Lourdes, 18.

302
“The heavy hand of the prelate”: FOC to Ashley Brown, May 26, 1958,
CW,
1072.

303
“The sight of Faith”: Katherine Anne Porter, “Gracious Greatness,”
Esprit
8, no. 1 (University of Scranton, Scranton, Pa., Winter 1964): 56.

303
“I joined them for lunch”: W. A. Sessions, “Sally Fitzgerald 1916–2000,” 4.

304
as “a pilgrim”: FOC to Betty Hester, December 14, 1957,
CW,
1056.

304
“hyper-thyroid”: FOC to Betty Hester, May 17, 1958,
HB,
282.

304
les piscines:
The seventeen marble baths and stone portico were built in 1955.

304
“At least there are no societal”: FOC to Elizabeth Bishop, June 1, 1958,
CW,
1073.

304
“Nobody I am sure”: FOC to Betty Hester, May 17, 1958,
HB,
282.

305
“After lunch we left Barcelona”: “Diary of Eleanor and Marie Bennett,” Archives, Diocese of Savannah.

305
“There is a wonderful radiance”: FOC to Betty Hester, “Monday” [May 5, 1958],
HB,
280.

306
“Shrines to the Virgin”: FOC to Sally and Robert Fitzgerald, May 11, 1958,
CW,
1069.

306
“4 old ladies”: FOC to Betty Hester, April 19, 1958,
HB,
280.

306
“write up”: FOC to Sally and Robert Fitzgerald, February 26, 1958,
CW,
1064.

306
“revived as soon as”: Ibid., May 11, 1958,
CW,
1069.

306
“The Freak in Modern Fiction”: A draft of the lecture intended for May 1958 is kept in the “FOC Collection,” GCSU, along with a draft of the variant lecture she gave on “The Freak in Southern Fiction” at Birmingham-Southern College on Novem-ber 25, 1958.

306
“My capacity for staying home”: FOC to Ashley Brown, May 16, 1958,
CW,
1071.

306
“Ah, seeing the Pope”: FOC to Brainard and Frances Neel Cheney, December 2, 1958,
CC,
81.

306
“experience is the greatest”: FOC to Maryat Lee, May 20, 1958,
HB,
284.

307
“a beautiful child”: Sally Fitzgerald, “Chronology,”
CW,
1251.

307
“I prayed there for the novel”: FOC to Janet McKane, February 25, 1963,
CW,
1179.

307
“much better contract”: FOC to Betty Hester, April 19, 1958,
HB,
280.

307
“The little vacation”: FOC to Cecil Dawkins, May 22, 1958,
HB,
284.

307
“Unfortunately not any 50”: FOC to Betty Hester, June 14, 1958,
HB,
288.

308
“You have to push”: Ibid., July 12, 1957,
HB,
229.

308
“Love is a struggle”:
Flannery O’Connor’s Library: Resources of Being,
edited by Arthur F. Kinney (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1985), 19.

308
“I am the dense kind”: Maryat Lee to FOC, February 20, 1959, GCSU.

308
“colors”: FOC to Maryat Lee, March 15, 1959, GCSU.

308
“We don’t have that one”: FOC to John Hawkes, November 28, 1961,
CW,
1157.

308
“I keep clear of Faulkner”: FOC to Betty Hester, March 20, 1958,
HB,
273.

308

That’s
good stuff”: Sally Fitzgerald, “Flannery O’Connor: Patterns of Friendship, Patterns of Love,”
Georgia Review
52, no. 3 (Fall 1998): 419.

309
“one-and-a-half”: Louise H. Abbot, “Remembering Flannery,”
Flannery O’Connor Bulletin
23 (1994–95), 77.

309
“with yellow hair”: FOC to Sally and Robert Fitzgerald, April 20, 1959,
HB,
329.

309
“Tarwater’s final vision”: FOC, “On Her Own Work,”
MM,
117.

310
“stumbling block”: FOC to John Hawkes, October 6, 1959,
CW,
1109.

310
“gotten right”: Richard Gilman, “On Flannery O’Connor,”
New York Review of Books
13, no. 3 (August 21, 1969): 26.

310
“RUIN MY EYES”: FOC to Sally and Robert Fitzgerald, [n.d., “Saturday,” 1951],
CW,
892.

310
“thousands of little kids”: J. D. Salinger,
The Catcher in the Rye
(New York: Little, Brown, 1951), 173.

310
“can drive me nuts”: FOC to Betty Hester, April 4, 1958,
CW,
1066.

311
“Younglady”: FOC to Rebekah Poller, June 27, 1958,
Flannery O’Connor Bulletin
12 (1983): 70.

311
“swan of old cars”: Robert Lowell to FOC, [n.d., December 1953],
The Letters of Robert Lowell,
edited by Saskia Hamilton (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2005), 203.

311
“hearse-like”: FOC to Betty Hester, August 30, 1958,
HB,
294.

311
“my Jung friend”: Ibid., April 30, 1960,
HB,
394.

311
“She certainly found him”: Louise Abbot, in discussion with the author, June 2, 2004.

311
“When I knocked”: Ted R. Spivey,
Flannery O’Connor: The Woman, the Thinker, the Visionary
(Macon, Ga.: Mercer University Press, 1955), 15.

312
“could sense certain deep”: Ibid., 16.

312
“I have just finished”: FOC to Dr. T. R. Spivey, September 9, 1958,
HB,
294.

312
“Now on a first-name basis”: Spivey,
Flannery O’Connor,
24.

312
“dialogic”: FOC to Dr. T. R. Spivey, November 16, 1958,
CW,
1079.

313
“He has a very fine mind”: FOC to Betty Hester, November 8, 1958,
CW,
1078.

313
“I only have to bear”: FOC to Sally and Robert Fitzgerald, January 1, 1959,
HB,
315.

Other books

Harper's Rules by Danny Cahill
If My Heart Could See You by , Sherry Ewing
Soulprint by Megan Miranda
A Kind of Vanishing by Lesley Thomson
Cursed Be the Child by Castle, Mort
Disaster for Hire by Franklin W. Dixon
Infernal Devices by KW Jeter
Counterfeit World by Daniel F. Galouye
16 Taking Eve by Iris Johansen
Poison Flower by Thomas Perry