The Secret Life of Bees by
Sue Monk Kidd
The Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd
is set in racist South Carolina in the summer of 1964. It tells the story of a
young girl named Lily who runs away from her abusive home and finds herself in
the company of three African-American sisters. The sisters take Lily in and give
her a bed, food, clothes, and shelter in exchange for her working with the bees
that produce their honey. Lily grows vastly throughout the story, and as she
begins to find love and acceptance, thinks less about the haunting memory of
accidentally killing her own mother. The
Secret Life of Bees, overall, is an incredible story about female strength,
passion, and acceptance. Although the beginning of the story starts out slowly,
the rest of the novel is filled with drama that keeps the pages turning.
The characters
in The Secret Life of Bees are well
developed and well spoken. There are the protagonists: Lily, the Boatwrights,
Zach, and Rosaleen, and the main antagonist: T-Ray, Lily’s father. Each
character has flaws and a strong past. Kidd shows great human strength through
the characters in her novel as they let go of pain inside of them and learn
about love and companionship.
The writing
style of The Secret Life of Bees is
filled with mass amounts of figurative language, perhaps too much, that flows
perfectly. With the story written from Lily’s point of view, it allows the
audience to feel everything that Lily is feeling, whether it is pain,
desperation, fear, excitement, or passion. Especially at the beginning of the
book when Lily describes her memory of killing her mother and being abused and
neglected by her father. Sue Monk Kidd does a wonderful job of describing this
pain and desperation that Lily feels inside: the idea of being loved and cared
for by somebody is completely absurd and unrealistic to the extent that the
only thing that Lily has to hold onto is the uncertain memory of her deceased
mother.
The Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd














