Compare And Contrast The Lottery And A Good Man Is Hard To Find

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Foreshadowing is the beginning detail or scene that allows the reader to predict the ending. Often times the giveaway is vague or seems insignificant to the reader, until it becomes overwhelmingly obvious when the ending has finally been met. In two short stories, “A Good Man is Hard to Find” by Flannery O’ Connor and “The Lottery” by Shirley Jackson, we see perfect examples of this literary device involving death to come to the innocent.
In “A Good Man is Hard to Find,” a family prepares to vacation in Florida, however the grandmother tries to encourage a visit to Tennessee, excusing her longing by referring to a killer 's late escape, also known as the Misfit. While on their way to Florida, the grandmother thinks back about the past and persuades Bailey, her son to take a byway to see an old house she recalls. The grandmother 's cat distracts Bailey while driving, forcing the car to crash. The escaped convict, called the Misfit, pulls up with his cronies, and the grandmother tells him that she …show more content…

A custom starts: Mr. Summers, a man who has participated in seventy-seven lotteries, brings a box with many pieces of paper inside. He starts joking in a friendly manner with the other residents while the names of all the relatives in the town are gathered in his box. Once they start, family members begin drawing sheets of paper from the box. Tessie’s, a woman who arrived late due to washing the dishes, husband, Mr. Hutchinson draws a sheet of paper with a black dot and Tessie worriedly shouts that he wasn’t given enough time. Any plea from her is ignored and the other people appear to be either annoyed or uncaring. The slips are recovered and the drawing proceeds, to which Tessie pulls a slip with a dark spot and is stoned to death by the other

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