Preview

The Misfit Grandmother

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
495 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
The Misfit Grandmother
The story opens as a family prepares to go on vacation in Florida. The story focuses immediately on the grandmother, who wants to visit relatives in east Tennessee and who uses the escape of the Misfit, a murderer, from prison to try to persuade her son, Bailey, to change his mind. He refuses. The two grandchildren, John Wesley and June Star, are quickly characterized as smart alecks who nevertheless understand their grandmother and her motives very well. When the family sets out, the grandmother is resigned to making the best of things. She is first to get into the car and has even, secretly, brought along her cat. As she rides along, her conversation is conventional, self-centered, and shallow.When the family stops for lunch at a barbeque stand, their conversation again turns to the Misfit, and the adults agree that people are simply not as nice as they used to be. Later, back in the car, the grandmother persuades Bailey to take a road which she imagines (wrongly, as it turns out) will lead by an old mansion. Suddenly the cat escapes its basket and jumps on Bailey’s neck, and the car runs into the ditch. As the family assesses its injuries, a man who is obviously the Misfit drives up with his armed henchmen. The grandmother immediately feels that she recognizes him as someone she has known all of her life, and she tells him that she knows who he is. …show more content…
He blames his career on Jesus, who, he says, threw everything “off balance” by raising the dead. Because the Misfit cannot be sure that the miracle really occurred, he cannot know how to think about it. If Jesus really raised the dead, the Misfit says, the only logical response would be to drop everything and follow him. If he did not, then life is meaningless and only crime makes sense: “No pleasure but in

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    The Misfit quickly acknowledged the grandmother did not want to help change his life, instead, she was looking for a way to escape from him shooting her. The Misfit explained to his men “’she would of been a good woman…if it had been someone there to shoot her every minute of her life’” (493). As the Misfit shot the grandmother, she fell back with her eyes open, staring at the cloudless sky, smiling. One by one Bailey, the Grandmother, and the Misfit rule out why there are no “good” men in the story through their behavior foreshadowing their…

    • 1139 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The first facade that the Grandmother tries to portray of herself is when she expressed how important it was for her to dress up during the road trip so that “anyone seeing her dead on the highway would know at once she was a lady”, with this statement one can see that the Grandmother is morally and spiritually disconnected. On the way to Florida Grandmother's character slowly unravels as she criticizes the “little packaninny” they saw standing outside with no pants on, stating that the “little niggers in the country don't have things like we do” suggesting that they were better off than most people which is contradictory to what most Christians believe(Bedford/St. Martin's 141). The Grandmother nags her son into taking them to visit an old plantation…

    • 1115 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The grandmother was doing her best to manipulate Bailey just so she could have her way and does what she wants, she was willing to lie and even make up things that were not true. She goes as far as disrupting Bailey while he is trying to read the newspaper journal. She tells him “here this fellow that calls himself the Misfit is aloose from the Federal Pen and headed toward Florida and you read here what it says he did to these people” (O’Conner, 308). She even told them to take her to Tennessee “You all ought to take them somewhere else for a change so they would see different parts of the world and be broad” (O’Conner, 309). This grandmother has been willing to just have her way at all cost, she even when as far as telling her grandkids about a plantation she worked on as a maiden lady and a man named Edgar Atkins Teagarden who would bring her watermelons everyday with his initials carved in it. This grandmother just does not know when to stop lying and manipulating her family with these imagery stories of a life that she never lived.…

    • 733 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Right from the beginning, the reader can see the first characteristic, entitlement; appear in the Grandmother’s personality by her behaviors. The story starts with the family preparing for a vacation to Florida. The Grandmother wants to go to Tennessee and feels she is entitled to do so. However, she can’t convince any of the family members, especially her son Bailey. The day of the trip, Bailey tells his mother that she cannot take the cat with her in the car. The Grandmother feels she is entitled to do what she wants and bring her pet so she stores the cat in a basket with a newspaper on top and puts it in the back of the car before anyone else gets in. This feeling of entitlement leads to the Grandmother’s death at the end of the short story. She accidently scares the cat who escapes the basket and jumps onto Bailey’s neck. He drives the car into a ditch where later, the Misfit and his friends appear. The Grandmother’s feelings of entitlement get herself and her family murdered.…

    • 846 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    A focus on characters, especially the grandmother gives a theme of grace and self-discovery. Once faced with the misfit and possible death she changes from unreligious to religious trying to bid her survival. And in turn has an insight of herself and the misfit. The theme of self-discovery is shown with the grandmothers change. She isn’t as bad as she may seem, just like the misfit who she at first despises then later relates with.…

    • 553 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Why is he called the misfit? His reasoning for calling himself the misfit is based on his encounter with the justice system. Supposedly, there were papers for his arrest-that he never saw-and then was told by the head doctor he killed his father. However, he claimed he had no recollection of such actions. He believes that actions are considered wrong only because other people say that they are wrong, and he must have done something bad because they have papers. He stated that he could not fit what he had done wrong, with the punishment he received in jail. At one point, he even refered his situation similar to Jesus, except that he, the Misfit, did commit some sort crime and once again just does not remember. His actions after his escape…

    • 301 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Grace, an important theme to O'Connor, is given to both The Grandmother and The Misfit, neither of whom is particularly deserving. As she realizes what is happening, The Grandmother begins to beg The Misfit to pray so that Jesus will help him. Right before The Misfit kills her, The Grandmother calls him one of her own children, recognizing him as a fellow human capable of being saved by God's Grace. Even though he murders her, the Misfit is implied to have achieved some level of Grace as well when he ends the story by saying, "It's no real pleasure in life." Earlier in the story, he claimed the only pleasure in life was meanness. The glorification of the past is prevalent in this story through the character of The Grandmother, who expresses nostalgia for the way things used to be in the South. Her mistake about the "old plantation that she had visited in this…

    • 483 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “The Jilting of Granny Weatherall” by Katherine Anne Porter, is structured from Granny’s rambling thoughts, which switch back and forth in time. Porter uses this rather loose structure first and foremost to entertain the reader. Porter challenges the reader by writing a story set entirely in one scene but creating a structure that follows the twists and turns of the main character’s thoughts. Although the actual events of the story never stray beyond Granny Weatherall’s bed, Granny’s mind wanders everywhere, taking herself and the reader to all of the most important and dramatic events in her life. The reader comes to understand Granny’s rich, complicated life, which was full of both success and frustration. Porter’s first person narrative ends with the climax,…

    • 610 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Misfit Vs Brown

    • 1060 Words
    • 5 Pages

    This leads the reader to almost forget about the Misfit as a factor in the narrative. When the family wrecks their car as a result of the grandmother's impaired judgment, the Misfit and his comrades witness the wreck and stop, seemingly to assist them. The Misfit initially comes across as cool and collected, but the family's situation takes an ominous turn when the grandmother recognizes the Misfit as the escaped criminal she read about in the newspaper. In response to the accusation of indeed being the Misfit, he kindly replies "Yes'm" (1312). During the ensuing conversation, the Misfit continues utilizing social niceties, leaving the reader to almost approve of the Misfit in spite of the fact that he has committed some unknown horrendous crime. As the Misfit begins to have his cronies kill the family, he continues a conversation with the grandmother that ultimately leads to a discussion of religion. The Misfit confesses, "I was a gospel singer for a while," which leads the reader to believe that religion was once indeed a factor in his life. His use of past tense, however, along with his failure to pray with the grandmother and his attitude of contempt towards Jesus leads the reader to believe that he no longer utilizes religious principles. The grandmother makes final attempts to reason…

    • 1060 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    As soon as she reveals the unknown man’s true identity, she does not stop once to think about what he could do to her family. Instead, she pleads him to spare her life only. She goes on and on about the Misfit being a good man and that this means he could not possibly be able to hurt a good woman like her. As she tries to convince him to let her live, the Misfit’s companions, kill her family members one by one. She is able to see and hear when her son is taken away, and she does not beg the Misfit to spare her child’s life. Her moment of realization is described as follows, “You’re The Misfit...I recognized you at once! You wouldn't shoot a lady, would you? the grandmother said and removed a clean handkerchief from her cuff and began to slap at her eyes with it.” (O’Connor, 946-947). The grandmother even in a situation that involved harm to her own child, refuses to acknowledge anyone but herself. Her selfish thoughts and actions, prove to the reader that the “grandmother” is in reality a self-centered…

    • 891 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In his unpublished paper Jack and the Monster Factory, Simon Roltson, compares Misfit with the serial killer Carl Panzram, because both claims that their acts of violence were performance of revenge on a society whose rules and courts had brutalized them. Which rendered them violently antisocial. Panzram also claims that the penitentiary has a similar antisocial effect on all the other prisoners (Roltson 2). The Misfit also seems to argue that Jesus should be cursed, because Jesus put the humanity in dilemma by raising the dead. His act of raising the dead “thrown everything off balance.” He compares himself to Jesus because they both were punished. At least Jesus knew what he was being punished for, but Misfit had no idea. So, he thinks he was not treated right. But he finds the rational solution to this that is why he always sign for everything he does and get a copy of it. So, he says “you’ll know what you done and hold up the crime to punishment and see do they match and in the end, you’ll have something to prove you ain’t been treated right” (O’Conner 10). This is his way of “doing right by himself.” Misfit wants to transfer his own felt degradation to grandmother as a means of freedom, that is why he said “no pleasure but meanness.” He also wants to decrease his pain by killing or by mean to others but all this increases it as he mentioned “it’s no real pleasure in life.” So, his act of reducing or get rid of his pain by…

    • 1374 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Southern Gothic

    • 886 Words
    • 4 Pages

    The Misfit is a more modern man who spends his time murdering the innocent, also known as a serial killer. The Misfit is a complicated man with what can be debated as the character with the least amount of character development, yet the most at the same time. He himself does not know if he has done what he has been told he has done. He said himself, “It was a head doctor who said what i had done was kill my daddy but I know that was a lie. My daddy died in nineteen ought nineteen of the epidemic flu and I never had a thing to do with it.” The Misfit spoke well of his father, and said himself that he called himself the misfit because he could never make what he had done wrong fit in what he had been through himself through punishment. The Misfit does not have religious beliefs, as many Jews in the Holocaust lost their faith in god, he did as well after the trauma of his father dying, and the Misfit paying the consequences for it. The Misfit is a new type of evil and makes the story unique with the rare epiphany for the villain in a story. He seemed like the stereotypical evil in the beginning of the story, but later changes to be a slightly chaotic neutral as he says, “"Some fun!" Bobby Lee said. "Shut up, Bobby Lee" The Misfit said. "It's no real pleasure in…

    • 886 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    A Good Man Is Hard To Find

    • 1120 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Throughout, the story we see the grandmother being manipulative, deceitful, and selfish. Aruther Breatha, the author of the article “O’Connor’s A Good Man is Hard to Find” even compares the grandmother morally and philosophically to the serial-killing Misfit (Breatha 246). The grandmother is seen being manipulative when she is trying to change her son Baily’s mind about going to Florida, so she can go to Tennessee. She is described as “seizing at every chance to change Bailey’s mind” (O’Connor 364). She even tries to make Baily feel bad about taking his children in the direction where a criminal is a loose (O’ Connor 364). She has no care, for what the family as a whole want to do, and is only concerned, with what she wants to do, and where she wants to go on vacation. When all her attempts to stop the family from going to Florida fail, she starts to become deceitful. The first of her deceitful action is bring the cat along even though Baily said not to so, then when the family is on the road the grandmother want to stop at an old plantation she used to visit as a child. Baily does not want to stop so she lies and tell the children that “There was a secret panel in this house” (O’Connor 368), and that it was filled with silver. This of course drives the children to bug, Baily, and the grandmother get what she wants. Once, the family turns down…

    • 1120 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Precaution is always need it, in this short story the grandma warned his son about a criminal that called himself “the misfit” telling him he was headed to Florida. Bailey should have realized that traveling at this time could be very dangerous for him and his family.…

    • 750 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Un-American Stereotypes

    • 552 Words
    • 3 Pages

    The narrator characterizes the grandmother as a woman who prays for her children and grandchildren who she says are being raised in a barbaric country, by saying this she is stating that she dislikes America. On the other hand the narrator describes that she enjoys playing and chasing her siblings around behind the church. While playing these games with her siblings, her brother references multiple movie that are American such as The Lone Ranger. Towards the end of the story the narrator speaks of a woman and man who approach and assume that they do not speak English. This is the characteristic of a lot of Americans who assume that because of looks you are confined to one certain culture, language, and community.…

    • 552 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays