Exploring Character Complexity in 'A Good Man is Hard to Find'

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*I had issues with download the .doc file to my PC for unknown reasons, so for sake of citation i have included a link to a pdf of the text. I’m sorry is this is an inconvenience, but i did not want to be without citations. Here is the exact site I used: http://www.boyd.k12.ky.us/userfiles/447/Classes/28660/A%20Good%20Man%20Is%20Hard%20To%20Find.pdf * When reading "A Good Man is Hard to Find" I found the relationship between the Grandmother and the Misfit very complex. I personally think this is one of the best relationships we have been presented all this semester. I believe this because the Grandmother is a very dynamic character, while the Misfit is extremely stagnant. This lets us view a shifting and complex relationship alongside The killing people get-up aside, the Misfit is the most likable character in the story. At the time of meeting the family, he has done nothing wrong. In contrast, the Grandmother has led them astray, upset the driver, and smuggled in the feline aspect of the car crash (O’Conner 15-19). Depending on the reader's view of mental illness, the Misfit most likely has some psychological issue where he snaps and can't control himself. If we view the story like this, the Misfit seems like the biggest victim of himself. In this way and others listed, I personally feel a small amount of pity for the "bad guy" of the This struck me as peculiar until I looked deeper into this. I believe the Grandmother says this because the Misfit has logically discredited all of her prior arguments. So I believe she reverts to her instincts and the most prevalent one, after losing her family, must have been her maternal instincts. I think that the Grandmother was "going for broke" when she reached out to touch the Misfit. I theorize that she did not change and this action was the final straw she could pull. I believe the reason this was done last was because it was

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