La vita segreta delle api

La vita segreta delle api

Sue Monk Kidd

4.10
1,355,423 valutazioni·38,647 recensioni

Ambientato nella Carolina del Sud nel 1964, La vita segreta delle api racconta la storia di Lily Owens, la cui vita è stata segnata dal ricordo confuso del pomeriggio in cui sua madre fu uccisa. Quando Rosaleen, la coraggiosa "sostituta materna" nera di Lily, insulta tre dei più accaniti razzisti de...

pagine
352
Format
Paperback
Pubblicato
2003-01-28
Editore
Penguin Books
ISBN
9780142001745

Sull'autore

Sue Monk Kidd
Sue Monk Kidd

685 libri · 0 follower

Sue Monk Kidd was raised in the small town of Sylvester, Georgia, a place that deeply influenced the writing of her first novel The Secret Life of Bees. She graduated from Texas Christian University in 1970 and later took creative writing courses at Emory University and Anderson College, as well as studying at Sewanee,...

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Recensioni della comunità

38,647 recensioni
4.1
1,355,423 valutazioni
5
45%
4
30%
3
15%
2
7%
1
3%
Brady Lockerby
Brady Lockerby·6 months ago
a beautiful story of how sometimes the best family, is the family that you find. as a lover of bees, this was just everything to me! (yes i have read Mad Honey) and loved all of the bee facts and how they tied into the story perfectly. now off to watch the movie!
Nikola
Nikola·3 years ago
4,5/5
Lisa of Troy
Lisa of Troy·3 years ago
The Secret Life of Bees is a fictional story set in 1964 South Carolina. Lily Owens lives with her abusive father, T.Ray, and she is haunted by the mysterious circumstances surrounding her mother’s death. One day, Lily finds herself in legal trouble after a racist encounter, and she goes on the run with Rosaleen. Will Lily find a place where she is loved and accepted? What will happen when her new host discovers the truth?Each chapter starts off with some facts about bees. Did you know that in c...
zuza_zaksiazkowane
zuza_zaksiazkowane·3 years ago
3.5
Will Byrnes
Will Byrnes·17 years ago
Sue Monk Kidd - image from her FB pagesThe Secret Life of Bees is a lovely tale. It tells of Lily, a South Carolina 14 year old. She lives, unhappily, with her crusty father T. Ray and Rosaleen, the woman who raised her after her mother died when Lily was 4. It is a coming of age tale set against the civil rights issues of the early 60’s. It is certainly no coincidence that Lily (as in white) spends most of the book in the company of earth-mother black people. Rosaleen attempts to register to vo...
Anna
Anna·18 years ago
It was ironic that I read most of this book on Mother's Day. At the core, this book isn't about race relations, the Virgin Mary, or even beekeeping, though those are all interesting parts of the story. It's a book about mothers. Mothers who are imperfect, mothers who make mistakes, and women who become mothers because they see people who need to be loved. I can't readily connect to most of those other topics, but everyone on the planet knows what it's like to have--or need--a mother in their liv...
Dolly
Dolly·18 years ago
I confess to being a little hesitant going into this book. It is, after all, that most cliched and irritating of literati faves: a coming-of-age story set in the American South. Lily, a motherless 14-year-old girl lives with her bigoted abusive father on a peach farm in South Carolina. Her goals involve befriending black people and finding information about her long-dead mother. Just summarizing this thing inspires the eye-rolling.But the book does have some saving graces. First, the writing is ...
Sammy
Sammy·18 years ago
Ahhh! *gasp* *choke* *stammer* I can barely find the words to say how much I loved this book. Honestly, The Secret Life of Bees has to be one of the best books I've read in a while. I just want to give it several A+'s and a kiss!It was touching, well-written, beautiful, full of expression, insightful, anything you could want in a book and then some. It started off with a bang, that wasn't a bang... it grabbed you, but didn't startle you so much that the rest of the book was dull in comparison. T...
Rae  Walker
Rae Walker·18 years ago
This was a harmless, heart warming book that did not change my life or enrich my thinking in any large way - except perhaps that I am slightly less afraid of bees. One thing that is a slight pet peeve with me is the healing power apparently inherent in the culture of the 'other'. Here is the formula: 1 caucasian person, hurt and broken by the world they live in, be it by family, work or environment + 1 minority culture (black or asian is fine) = that one caucasian person finding the true wonders...
Kerry
Kerry·18 years ago
Okay, hear me out. This is SO not the kind of book I normally read. It's the kind of book my mother reads. You know the type I'm talking about: "Reviving Ophelia", "Not Without My Daughter"...mother-y books. It was, in fact, my mother who demanded I read this book, because she read it in her book club. DOUBLE red flag. That is when I normally drop the book and run as fast as possible away from her, screaming and flailing my arms. But when she gave me this book I happened to have a lot of time on...