Tag: Flannery O’Connor Childhood Home

Photos from the Flannery O’Connor Childhood Home’s 2016 street fair and homemade parade

The Flannery O’Connor Childhood Home recently threw another big party for the Savannah-born author’s birthday. The street fair and homemade parade are a few years old now, and this was the biggest turnout yet. Seriously, chicken shit bingo, The Sweet…

The Economist takes note of the Flannery O’Connor Childhood Home in Savannah

From a recent article about historic house museums in The Economist, Keeping up appearances; When federal money runs out, ingenuity is called for: “It’s tremendous work to keep these places looking nice,” says Toby Aldridge, the resident guide at the…

Flannery O’Connor died 50 years ago today — a few thoughts

Mary Flannery O’Connor died on August 3, 1964 — 50 years ago today. What more would Flannery O’Connor have written if she had lived to the age of 89? What would she not have written in her 20s and 30s…

Flannery O’Connor-inspired art in Southern Discomfort 2, silent auction and reception on 1/31

I haven’t read everything that Flannery O’Connor ever wrote — I haven’t yet tackled the recently released A Prayer Journal, for example. But I’ve been immersed to varying degrees in O’Connor’s life and work for I guess about a decade…

Pulitzer winner Robert Olen Butler inspires readers, writers at Savannah appearances

At the Flannery O’Connor Childhood Home’s 5th annual Ursrey Memorial Lecture last week, Pulitzer Prize winner Robert Olen Butler spoke with considerable passion about the creative act of writing. “Art comes from the place where you dream.” He was talking…

Brad Gooch goes from Flannery O’Connor to Rumi, from Georgia to Tajikistan

Brad Gooch‘s outstanding biography Flannery: A Life of Flannery O’Connor shined an appropriate spotlight on arguably the most influential Savannah-born writer of the 20th century — and one of the most important writers in the South. Many of us affiliated…

Happy 88th Birthday, Flannery O’Connor

When an author has died young, it’s pretty typical to hear readers bemoan the loss of all that work that never had the chance to be created. But I don’t often hear readers of Flannery O’Connor talk about what she…

A few thoughts and images from Luis Urrea’s talk in Savannah

On Tuesday evening, Luis Alberto Urrea (The Devil’s Highway, Queen of America, and a dozen other books) gave the Flannery O’Connor Childhood Home’s 4th Ashley and Terry Ursrey Memorial Lecture at Trinity United Methodist Church in Savannah.

Luis Alberto Urrea will deliver Flannery O’Connor Childhood Home’s 4th Ursrey Memorial Lecture on August 21

The first three Ursrey Memorial Lectures were given by Pulitzer Prize winner Michael Cunningham (The Hours), man of letters Alan Gurganus (Oldest Living Confederate Widow Tells All), and National Book Award winner Jaimy Gordon (Lord of Misrule). Urrea seems like a great author to extend that impressive list.

SCAD production does justice to two Flannery O’Connor masterpieces

Word-for-word productions of “Greenleaf” and “Everything That Rises Must Converge” continue through Sunday.