Secret Life Of Bees

Words: 578
Pages: 3

The Secret Life of Bees is a story that has a metaphor behind it about the main character Lily Melissa Owens life and how the author Sue Monk Kidd builds on hives and bees as a metaphor. The novel comes down to be in 1964 in Sylvan, South Carolina, and Lily is living with her father because she believes that she shot her mother Deborah when she was four years old. Lily's father is a neglectful and abusive parent, when Lily is laying on her bed at night she is often visited by bees. Lily symbolizes the bees as a presence from her mother, and later on the novel, Lily follows the path of her mother to Tiburon and finds herself on a honey farm.
Sue Monk Kidd is the author of The Secret Life of Bees. Kidd was born August 12, 1948, in Sylvester, Georgia. Sue would listen to the honeybees in the wall of her home as a child. She graduated with a B.S. degree in nursing from Texas Christian University in 1970. In 1977, she began to write the novel The Secret Life of Bees, she mostly based the novel on her childhood during the 1960s in the South. In 2002, her novel was published to critical acclaim and numerous awards. Then in
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I notice how much my mom has accomplished and sacrificed a lot for me, and my siblings. Taking her for granted is one of the worst things I believe I could do to her. Livings without a father does make me sad sometimes because I see the importance you're supposed to feel with your own father. For example, a father is supposed to make you feel like a princess, he's supposed to be there for you when you just got heartbroken by a boy, and when he's not there it just makes me sad. However, then I see my mom and she's the one that takes over as a father figure. My mom is the best I love her so much, which is why I believe that Lily made a great decision to go follow her mother's path, to try to at least feel closer to her because she wasn't living the best life with her