Sue Monk Kidd's The Secret Life Of Bees

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Biography of Sue Monk Kidd Sue Monk Kidd grew up in Sylvester, Georgia and attended Texas Christian University. She also took creative writing courses at Emory University and Anderson College and studied at several writers’ conferences. Monk was a writer before she wrote The Secret Life of Bees, but did not start writing fiction until she was in her forties. The Secret Life of Bees was published in 2002 and is her first novel. It spent over two and one-half years on the New York Times “Best Sellers List.” It sold over six million copies in the United States and eight million copies worldwide. It was also named the Book Sense paperback book of the year in 2004. The Secret Life of Bees has been made into a play and in 2008 it was made into a…show more content…
One is that it represents Rosaleen, an African American nanny who has raised Lily since her mother died. The Madonna is the ultimate symbol of motherhood, and even though Rosaleen and Lily are quite different, Rosaleen has served as Lily’s mother. At the beginning of the novel, Lily has learned to be racist and believes that all African Americans are like Rosaleen, uneducated and only fit to serve white Americans. However, when she realizes how strong Rosaleen is by seeing her courage in attempting to vote even though she knows what the results will be, Lily understands how prejudiced she has been in her thinking. She becomes even less racist after meeting the Boatwrights and when she starts having feelings for…show more content…
May uses it to mourn the loss of her twin sister, April, who committed suicide. Lily uses it to mourn her mother. The actual Wailing Wall in Jerusalem is also used for mourning the tragedies of Jewish history. A person can write a prayer on a slip of paper and put it into a niche in the wall. The belief is that the prayer will reach God’s ears because it is in this holy place. The Wailing Wall in The Secret Life of Bees has essentially the same function. May writes all of her thoughts down and slips them into the wall, and eventually, Lily does too. The people who use it as a place to mourn or pray believe that it is a sacred place and that they have God’s ear when they are in it. Perhaps in the context of the novel, they do, for it is there that Lily learns to forgive herself and the trials of the other characters are soothed. At the end of the novel, Lily describes May’s Wailing Wall like the one in Jerusalem is often described. She says, “I am the wall keeper now. I keep it fed with prayers and fresh rocks. I/wouldn’t be surprised if May’s wailing wall outlasted us all. At the end of time, when all the world’s buildings have crumbled away, there it will be” (Kidd, pg. 311-312). The Wailing Wall in Jerusalem is actually the wall of a temple that was destroyed, but Jewish people believe that eventually the temple will be restored and the Wailing Wall’s prayers will be
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