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The Secret Life of Bees

The Secret Life of Bees

List Price: $14.00
Your Price: $10.50
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Beautiful
Review: As far as Memoirs go I would have to say that this book, ranks up there as one of the best I have read. Is it fiction or Non Fiction: hard to tell. But beautifully written. The author does an excellent job of pulling the reader in and making them understand. This book is in the same type of genre as two other books I have read that I find to be equally as good. Nightmares Echo and My Fractured Life. Each is excellent in its own right.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Trip Down Memory Lane
Review: The Secret Life of Bees was a wonderful find that I also shared with my teenaged daughter and son (twenty one). It is an uplifting story that is somewhat old fashioned, without being out of style. For some reason the tone took me back to my young days reading Laura Ingles Wilder's Little House on The Prairie books. Not to take anything away from The Da Vinci Code or My Fractured Life as great modern books, The Secret Life of Bees has a homespun style that reminds me of when I was young.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great Book!
Review: I loved reading this book. I found myself relating to Lily as she dealt with awkward adolescence and a search for something more. She makes for a very likeable character and you'll be rooting for her the whole day.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Do you have a teenaged daughter?
Review: If you do then you should both read this together. I suggest this because it is a well written novel with interesting woman/girl relationships. The charaters and setting stay with you. The story itself is fine but not the kind of book that I look forward to the turning of the pages. If you are looking for something to share with your daughter, without getting too heavy, this is the book. You'll learn about bees and life and discrimination without a heavy hand.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The Secret Life of Bees
Review: This is an excellent story about the life of a young motherless girl during the Civil Rights Movement. Lily is a 13 year-old white girl living on a peach farm in Virginia with her overbearing father, T-Ray, and her Negro nanny, Rosaleen. When Lily and Rosaleen run away to South Carolina, the action begins. This is a wonderful story of love and finding a true sense of family. I highly recommend this novel.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Great characters.
Review: With "Secret Life of Bees," Kidd does a nice job of creating characters that drive the story, rather than vice-versa. If you're tired of plot-driven novels with thin, and often cliché, characters, then you're likely to dig this one.

If you're into writers like Sue Monk Kidd, Yann Martel, Mitch Albom, etc., then there's a new writer you should check out: GREG IPPOLITO. His most recent novel, "Zero Station," is a politically charged page-turner that pits its main Gen X character (John Saylor) against his Baby Boomer parents, teachers, etc., during the winter of 1991 -- in the heart of the Persian Gulf War. Right now, Ippolito is still a relative unknown (a friend turned me onto his work)...but this is a must-read. You can check him out and read an excerpt at:

http://www.zero-station.net

Don't miss it.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: No secret life of man
Review: This book was interesting, but the men really were cardboard figures. I was hoping they would have more human qualities, as in "Poisonwood Bible" and "Shipping News." The book celebrated the special qualities of nurturing women, but was very one-sided. The feeling of the deep South came through loud and clear. There is more to the "Circle of Life" besides maternity.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: NON-STOP READING
Review: Once I started, it was hard to put it down. I found myself emotional in some chapters and laughing the next, a good mix. I'm recommending this to all my friends.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: cookie cutter novel
Review: I live near Spartanburg, SC. The language phrasings of the characters used in book is accurate enough for the era(60's) and region of the country. That's about it though, the first half of the book admittedly had me hooked. It reminded me of the fast read of "to kill a mocking bird". But that is where it stops. The plot of the story is tired. The references to bees /christian connations are strewn throughout. The poor white girl who runs away from the bad man to be saved by a "hive" of women who swoop her up and protect her while she escapes her old life. You know how it goes,She learns to stand up for herself in the end and make her own decisions. Blah Blah. The book is not original idea and reeks of sentimentality.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of the Best Books I've Ever Read!
Review: I had to read The Secret Life of Bees for my AP English class, so I automatically assumed it would be terrible, but I was completely wrong. It turned out to be one of the best books I've read in my entire life.
The symbolism is incredible. The bee quotes at the beginning of each chapter match Lily's growth perfectly, and the Black Madonna is powerful and inspiring.
Lily's struggle to find love, unlike many other books, is inspirational, not sappy. Although at first look this book seems to be a typical coming of age novel, the plot is completely original and entertaining. I'd recommend it to anyone!


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