Focus Fiction: Book Club Kits
The Secret Life of Bees
Sue Monk Kidd
If you liked...Suggestions for further reading
The Secret Life of Bees
- Harper Lee, To Kill a Mockingbird (1960)
Lawyer Atticus Finch defends the real mockingbird of Harper Lee's classic,
Pulitzer Prize-winning novel--a black man charged with the rape of a white
woman. Through the eyes of Atticus's children, Scout and Jem Finch, Harper
Lee explores with rich humor and unanswering honesty the irrationality of
adult attitudes toward race and class in the Deep South of the 1930's.
- Nora Zeale Hurston, Their Eyes were Watching God (1970)
Fair and long-legged, independent and articulate, Janie Crawford sets out to
be her own person -- no mean feat for a black woman in the '30s. Janie's
quest for identity takes her through three marriages and into a journey back
to her roots.
- Dennis McFarland, Prince Edward (2004)
In 1959, after the Supreme Court's historic desegregation orders,
ten-year-old Benjamin Rome becomes caught in the middle between his own
family's efforts to establish a private whites-only system and his close
friendship with the son of a black hired hand.
- Anne D LeClaire, Leaving Eden (2002)
When Glamour Day, which promises a complete makeover comes to the
Klip-N-Kurl beauty parlor in Eden, Virginia, Tallie Brock, sees it as the
opportunity to pursue her dreams of Hollywood stardom.
- Pearl Cleage, I Wish I had a Red Dress (2001)
Joyce Mitchell is a young widow with a life filled with work, family, and
friends, but as the all-girl group she founded runs into problems, she feels
an increasing desire to treat herself to something, or someone, special.
- Sheila Williams, Dancing on the Edge of the Roof (2002)
Juanita Lewis, a forty-one-year-old African American woman, flees her dreary
existence to start a new life in the town of Paper Moon, Montana where her
culinary genius lands her a job at the local diner with gorgeous chef Jess
Gardiner, who shows her the true meaning of home.
- Fannie Flagg, Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Stop Cafe
(1987)
Mrs. Threadgoode's tale of two high-spirited women of the 1930s, Idgie and
Ruth, helps Evelyn, a 1980s woman in a sad slump of middle age, to begin to
rejuvenate her own life.
Major Character List
The Secret Life of Bees
- Lily Melissa Owens – main character, narrator, 14 years old,
mother died at age four by mysterious events.
- T. Ray Owens – Lily’s father, owner of the Owens Peach Enterprise
located outside Sylvan, South Carolina
- Deborah Owens – Lily’s mother, died when Lily was only four years
old, only remains are a pair of white cotton gloves, a photograph, and a
small wooden picture of Mary, mother of Jesus with the words “Tiburon, S.C.”
written on the back.
- Rosaleen Daise – Lily’s proud and outspoken African-American
nanny, stand-in mother of Lily for the past ten years. Her age is a mystery,
does not have a birth certificate, born in McClellanvill, South Carolina,
was a peach picker in T. Ray’s fields, very proud and determined she loves
Lily and becomes close friends with May Boatwright.
- August Boatwright –sister of June and May otherwise known as the
“calendar sisters”, lives with her sisters on Boatwright farm in Tiburon,
South Carolina, welcomes Lily and Roseleen into her pink house, runs Black
Madonna Honey to support her family, creator of an alternate religion based
on the statue of a black Mary which has been passed down through generations
of her family
- June Boatwright – sister of August and May, school teacher and
part owner of the Boatwright farm, volunteers as a cellist for a local
hospital, very suspicious of Lily’s origins and refuses to marry her lover,
Neil
- May Boatwright– sister of June and August, had a twin named April
who committed suicide at a young age, uses the “wailing wall” or sings “Oh!
Susanna,” when feeling depressed, extremely sensitive
Discussion Questions
The Secret Life of Bees
-
What is the central theme or main idea of the book? Is there more than one
theme? If yes, how are these ideas connected?
-
How do the beekeeping phrases in the beginning of each chapter relate to the
theme? How is beekeeping regarded throughout the story? Do you like the title?
What are some other possible titles?
-
Why did the author select a 14 year-old girl as the narrator? What do you think
of Lily by the end? Would you consider this a coming-of-age story?
-
What do you think of the story behind the Our Lady in Chains statue? (See pg.
107) Why do you think the statue was passed down to August? Do you know of any
similar stories?
-
Had you ever heard of the Black Madonna? If yes, where? What did you think of
August using the Black Madonna on her honey jars?
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How does Lily’s relationship to her mother change as she learns more about her?
Was Deborah a good mother? Does Lily ever forgive herself?
-
What do you know about the 1960’s? Is the time period important to the main
theme? Could this story take place in another time?
-
May’s Wailing Wall helped her deal with her feelings. What are other ways we
cope with feelings of pain, loss, or suffering? Are there any other ‘wailing
walls’ that people use today?
-
As Lily and Zachary Taylor formed a special relationship how did each view the
relationship? Did you root for them to be together? What do you predict will
happen in the future to Zach? Lily?
-
Did you like the book overall? Did you learn anything new? Would you give this
book as a gift to someone? Do you believe people will continue to read this
story after 10 years? What about 50 years?
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Updated: 2/5/2008 |
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