In the story, "A Good Man is Hard to Find," what is significant about the grandmother bringing up the Misfit at the beginning of the story?
It is significant that the grandmother brings up the Misfit at the beginning of the story because it foreshadows the events that occur later in the story when the family has an accident and the Misfit and his cohorts stop and kill them. She says, "'I wouldn't take my children in any direction with a criminal like that aloose in it. I couldn't answer to my conscience if I did.'" Ironically, this is just about the only time in the story that the grandmother is actually right about anything; it really would have been best for the family to avoid Florida. We also get to see what the grandmother's response to a person like the Misfit is when she's not actually faced with the person. In the end, we see the grandmother kind of buttering up the Misfit, insisting that he's a "good man," but this is such a contrast with her earlier description of him that we can see that she's only being nice to him to save her own skin. Her first references to him allow us to properly understand both her later behavior as well as to recognize the significance of her eventual epiphany that he is not really so different from her after all.
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