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    Lily’s rebellion against her father illuminates the importance of the road of dependence to independence. As a bildungsroman, The Secret Life of Bees, by Sue Monk Kidd, heavily focuses on the independence of an abused girl growing up in a time of feminine oppression and racial discrimination. For example, although Lily possesses a great ambition for literature, her father portrays contempt for it and thinks of college as “a waste of money for girls, even if they did, score the highest number a human

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    “Kidd’s ways to elicit sympathy in ‘The Secret Life of Bees.’” Sue Monk Kidd the gives the reader a compassionate perspective of Lily’s parents in “The Secret Life of Bees” with the use of metaphors, symbolism, and dialogue, that exhibits the only reason behind Deborah’s and Ray’s actions was either endearment, self-protection, or resentment. Deborah’s and Terrence’s dysfunctional marriage only began because of Deborah’s pregnancy. The reader will sympathize with Deborah’s depression and the repercussions

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    In the novel, The Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd, the symbolism of the color blue as Lily uses her favorite color to judge whether a person truly loves her. Lily believes that for someone to truly love her, they must know the most trivial detail of her: the color blue. For example, Lily, in an argument with her father, blatantly asks her father if he knows her favorite color. Although one would expect a father to know such fact, Terrence, her father, does not know Lily’s favorite color and

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    The character from the novel, The Secret Life of Bees that the author Sue Monk Kidd makes me admire most would be August Boatwright. She grew up and worked as a housekeeper for Deborah’s family and helped raise her like she did with Lily. She then went to college to become educated to teach history at a colored school for six years. She decided to follow her passion and join the family business of starting her own beekeeping business. August continuously refers to the beehive and its ways of operating

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    The book by the name of The Secret Life of Bees written by Sue Monk Kidd is about a white girl named Lily Owens who goes on a journey to find more about her dead mother who passed away when she was young. She finds herself in the Boatwright’s house (home of the honey makers) that is strictly for African-American women because she believes that her mother spent much of her life there. Lily finds herself dealing with frequent racial issues as the story takes place in Southern Carolina during the Civil

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    In the novel, The Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd, the color blue, a symbol of love, allows Lily to differentiate between people who truly love her. Lily believes that for someone to truly love her, they must know the most trivial detail of her: her favorite color, blue. For example, Lily, in an argument with her father, blatantly asks, “do you know what my favorite color is?”, however, her father responds with,”I know one thing, and that’s I’m going to find you…”. Although one would expect

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    “‘This Mary I am talking about sits in your heart all day long saying, ‘Lily, you are my everlasting home. Don’t you ever be afraid. I am enough. We are enough’’” (Kidd 289). This passage in The Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd, is significant to the novel because these strong, stylistic words spoken by August are what causes Lily to realize that she will never be alone. Throughout the passage Kidd uses strong words such as “all day long”, “everlasting home”, and “ever” (Kidd 289). These powerful

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    Cartographer Wasps and the Anarchist Bees by E. Lily Yu tells the fictional story of the relationship between an overpowering wasp community and a docile bee community. The wasps take over the bees, basically rule over them, and instill their very different way of life on them. A group of anarchist bees that oppose the wasp government secretly escape and begin a new community. The story abruptly ends though when both the cartographer wasps and anarchist bees die from humans and the cold. Throughout

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    The Secret Life of Bees includes many issues that were going on during the 1960’s. Some issues stated were more sought after than others depending where in the country one was located. In the book, Lily lives in the heart of the south, South Carolina, which makes it easy to point out specific, debatable topics. With this, The Secret Life of Bees portrays many of the movements and issues prevalent in the 1960s like Gender Issues, the Women’s Rights Movement, and the Civil Rights movement. As stated

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    or not to eat breakfast or larger decisions like whether or not to take the new promotion at work. These decisions are usually dawned upon us suddenly and we look to others to help decipher which decision is the ideal decision. In The Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd, Lily Melissa Owens is actuated by a variety of characters to make both ambiguous and venerable judgments throughout the novel. She did not do this on her own for she had people in her life communicating with her to finalize the verdicts

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