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Sue Monk Kidd
Sue Monk Kidd was born and raised in the tiny town of Sylvester,
Georgia, which is tucked among the pinelands and red fields of Southwest
Georgia, a place she has lovingly referred to it as "an enduring
somewhere." Her writing has been deeply influenced by place,
and she mined her experiences of growing up in Sylvester as she
wrote The Secret Life of Bees, her first novel.
Sue discovered her longing to be a writer when she was a child listening
to her fathers imaginative stories. In adolescence, encouraged
by English teachers who described her as a "born writer,"
she began writing her own stories, as well as keeping prolific journals
that chronicled her experiences, both internal and external, a practice
she has continued throughout her life. Two books which she read
at the age of fifteen- Thoreaus spiritual memoir, Walden and
Kate Chopins novel, The Awakening- had a deep impact on her
and would foreshadow the course she herself would eventually take
as a writer: writing spiritual memoir and novels.
Her hope for a career in writing was not without an early detour,
however. In what Sue has called an "inexplicable twist that
is partly due to a failure of courage and partly due to the cultural
climate of the South in 1966," she chose a more traditional
path when it came time to go to college. She majored in nursing
and graduated in 1970 from Texas Christian University with a B.S.
degree, then worked throughout her twenties as a registered nurse
on surgical and pediatric hospital units and as a college nursing
instructor. During that time, she married Sanford (Sandy) Kidd,
a graduate student in theology, and they had two children, Bob and
Ann.
Shortly before Sue turned thirty the pull to writing returned. She
was living in Anderson, South Carolina where her husband Sandy was
teaching at a small liberal arts college. She enrolled in writing
classes with the intention of writing Fiction, but was soon diverted
to non-Fiction when a personal essay she wrote for class was published
in Guideposts Magazine and reprinted in Readers Digest. Wanting
to help support her family, she began a career as a freelancer,
writing personal experience articles, most of them inspirational
and art of living pieces.
Sue found immediate success as a freelancer, becoming a Contributing
Editor at Guideposts. It was there she claims to have cut her writing
teeth, studying the craft of Fiction- character, plot, dialogue,
etc- in order to write her non-Fiction narratives, and gradually
finding her own unique voice and style. She published several hundred
articles during her freelance days, primarily in Guideposts Magazine,
but in numerous other publications, newspapers and journals.
It was during Sues thirties that she began to experience an
intellectual and spiritual flowering. She embarked on a serious
study of the classics of Western spirituality, philosophy, depth
psychology and mythology, while also reading voluminous amounts
of literary Fiction. She became deeply influenced by work of the
monk and poet, Thomas Merton and Swiss psychiatrist, C.G. Jung,
which would impact her writing in the years ahead.
Her first book was a spiritual memoir describing her advent into
contemplative Christian spirituality: Gods Joyful Surprise,
published by Harper SanFrancisco in 1988. Her second book, When
the Heart Waits, published by Harper SanFrancisco in 1990, was met
with critical acclaim and revealed a deepening of Sues voice.
Rooted in contemplative spirituality, the memoir recounts her intense
and vivid spiritual transformation.
The Secret Life of Bees has sold more than 3.5 million copies, spent
over eighty weeks on the New York Times bestseller list and been
published in more than 20 languages. It was awarded the 2004 Book
Sense Paperback book of the Year, nominated for the Orange Prize
in England and chosen as Good Morning Americas Read This!
Book Club pick. Taught widely now in college and high school class
rooms, The Secret Life of Bees is fast becoming a modern classic.
It has been produced on stage in New York by The American Place
Theater and is being adapted into a movie by Focus Films.
Sue began writing her second novel, The Mermaid Chair in 2002, completing
it in 2004. Published in the Spring of 2005, the novel explores
a womans pilgrimage to self-belonging, the inner life of mid
life marriage, and the little known region in the female soul where
the sacred and the erotic intersect. Set on a South Carolina barrier
island, it tells the beautiful and haunting story of 42 year old
Jessie Sullivan, a married woman who falls in love with a Benedictine
monk and the crisis and self- awakening this ignites.
Sue serves on the board of advisors for Poets & Writers, Inc.
and works to support their efforts for the literary arts and their
advocacy for emerging writers. She is Writer in Residence at Phoebe
Pember House in Charleston.
Today Sue lives beside a salt marsh near Charleston, South Carolina
with her husband Sandy and their black lab, Lily. She writes in
a book-lined, upstairs study where she can look out at the tidal
creeks and marsh birds. She is at work on a new book.
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