lessons are common to the real world and are regularly taught to children to use in everyday life. Have you ever heard of the saying “treat others the way you want to be treated”? This is a splendid example of a classic lesson that is taught to children based off of fictional stories. Not only do fables contain real world lessons, but fictional novels for young adults such as The Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd. This coming-of-age narrative contains lessons during the course of
Exploration of Cultural Diversity Tutu Wreh Introduction to Social Work University of Pittsburgh Introduction I confess being a little hesitant going into The Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd. The novel is set in 1964 in Sylvan, South Caroline. The main character Lily Melissa Owens grows into a young women as she escaped her abusive father and search to uncover her deceased mother’s past. I am not much for spending time on fiction. I tend to not read for entertainment, but for
Living your life in secret is never a good thing. In Sue Monk Kidd’s, The Secret Life of Bees, we see Lily live a secret life that could get her into a lot of trouble. We find out how interesting the author is and how big of a hit this novel turned in to. Sue Monk Kidd, the author of The Secret Life of Bees, was born on August 12, 1948. She grew up in Sylvester, Georgia where she lived most of her life. She started writing when she was just thirteen years old. She was inspired to be a writer because
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
her circle of attendants” (Longgood). Lily’s mother was thought to be the queen bee throughout the novel The Secret Life of Bees, and the Boatwrights to be her “circle of attendants”. Another perspective, Sue Monk Kidd could be seen as the “queen” and her created characters seen as the “attendants”. Lily, Melissa, and May have been found to have the most significance to the plot. Sue Monk Kidd carefully considered the names which she placed throughout the novel to make it so they were always relevant
In the following review by Jeff Zaleski deems “The Secret Life of Bees” a charming coming-of-age story by saying “Honey-sweet but never cloying.” This means that it never became boring or it stayed the same throughout the story. This book by Sue Monk Kidd has won the 2004 Sense Book of the Year Award, then this book was made into a movie that won an Award-Winning Film Award. The book takes place mostly in Tiburon, South Carolina in 1964. Within this book is an emotional story line that wants you
Sofina Lin ENG4U Ms. Mirrlees July 27, 2015 The Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd Averhart, Cara J., Rebecca S. Bigler, and Lynn S. Liben. "Race and the Workforce: Occupational Status, Aspirations, and Stereotyping Among African American Children." Developmental Psychology. American Psychological Association, Inc., 20 Dec. 2002. Web. 26 July 2015. . This study, performed on 92 African American children (47 girls and 45 boys) from a school in the Midwest, examines whether African-American people’s
As orated in the quotation above, the Mary of Chains serves as a great object of growth for Lily to find her own inner self and to be her own mother. In The Secret Life of Bees Lily struggles to find and connect with her mother throughout the novel. In the novel Lily continually prays to the black Mary as a way to cope with her inner troubles, including with herself and her mother. Lily continues to look at her past and dwell upon the fact that she doesn’t have a mother, and because of that Lily
The Secret Life of Bees displays the way memories of someone’s past affects the way they live in the future and how difficult maturing and being who you really are is. A girl, Lily Owens, accidentally kills her mother and is haunted by the memory. She lives with the constant wonder of what her life could have been if that dreadful incident did not happen. Her father is still around, however they have a minimal relationship and he tends to be abusive towards her. It is not known if the abuse stems
An important idea Sue Monk Kidd explores in her coming of age novel, The Secret Life of Bees is the racial prejudice of the 1960’s and the impact this has on the individual and the community. This example of a Bildungsroman is set in the politically tumultuous era against the backdrop of the Civil Rights movement in 1964. We are greeted with an otherwise unimaginable world in which minority groups including the African Americans are being denied basic human rights. It was an environment in which