Flannery O\'Connor may now be acknowledged as the "Great American Catholic Author," but this was not always the case.
He also analyzes how--on reader review sites such as Goodreads--her work is debated and discussed among "common readers" in ways very much as it was when Wise Blood was first published in 1952..
He examines the ways in which O\'Connor\'s work was adapted for the stage and screen and how these adaptations fostered her reputation as an artist.
Moran traces the critical reception in print of each of O\'Connor\'s works, finding parallels between her original reviewers and today\'s readers.
Drawing from the Farrar, Straus & Giroux archives at the New York Public Library and O\'Connor\'s private correspondence, he also concentrates on the ways in which Robert Giroux worked tirelessly to promote O\'Connor and change her image from that of a southern oddity to an American author exploring universal themes.
Moran tells the story of O\'Connor\'s evolving career and the shaping of her literary identity.
With Creating Flannery O\'Connor, Daniel Moran explains how O\'Connor attained that status, and how she felt about it, by examining the development of her literary reputation from the perspectives of critics, publishers, agents, adapters for other media, and contemporary readers.
Flannery O\'Connor may now be acknowledged as the "Great American Catholic Author," but this was not always the case