Sunday, April 26, 2009
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This is a review about The Secret Life of Bees, that gives you insight about specific literary elements in the book.
Sue Monk Kidd was born on August 12, 1948, in Sylvester, Georgia. She spent all of her childhood in Sylvester, a rural town that was the site of racial injustices so prevalent in the South during that time. As a child, Kidd observed the segregation between white and black southerners. Nevertheless, she recalls listening to the stories of the African American women that worked in the domestic realm of her home. As a teenager, she witnessed the beginnings of desegregation. The injustices she had encountered left a lasting impression on her. The Secret Life of Bees comes from Kidd's personal experience as a child growing up in the segregated South. Kidd has used the storytelling influences of her father and of the African American maids who worked in her home as a child. Both of these things helped shape the novel.
Before she began her writing career, Kidd majored in nursing and graduated in 1970 from Texas Christian University, then worked throughout her twenties as a registered nurse and as a college nursing instructor. During that time, she married Sanford Kidd, and they had two children, Bob and Ann. Her first book was a spiritual memoir: God’s Joyful Surprise, published by Harper SanFrancisco in 1988. Her second book, When the Heart Waits, published by Harper SanFrancisco in 1990. In 1997 she began writing her first novel, The Secret Life of Bees, and worked on it for the next three and a half years. The Secret Life of Bees has sold more than 3.5 million copies, spent over eighty weeks on the New York Times bestseller list and been published in more than 20 languages. It was awarded the 2004 Book Sense Paperback book of the Year, nominated for the Orange Prize in England and chosen as Good Morning America’s Read This! Book Club pick.Sue began writing her second novel, The Mermaid Chair in 2002, completing it in 2004.
- Maggie Todaro
http://www.suemonkkidd.com/
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