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Author

Sue Monk Kidd

/sue-monk-kidd-quotes-and-sayings

98 Quotes
6 Works

Author Summary

About Sue Monk Kidd on QuoteMust

Sue Monk Kidd currently has 98 indexed quotes and 6 linked works on QuoteMust. This page is the canonical destination for that author archive.

Works

Books and titles linked to this author

God's Joyful Surprise: Finding Yourself Loved The Dance of the Dissident Daughter The Invention of Wings The Mermaid Chair The Secret Life of Bees Traveling With Pomegranates: A Mother-Daughter Story

Quotes

All quote cards for Sue Monk Kidd

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I didn't know what to think, but what I felt was magnetic and so big it ached like the moon had entered my chest and filled it up. The only think I could compare it to was the feeling I got one time when I walked from the peach stand and saw the sun spreading across the late afternoon, setting the top of the orchard on fire while darkness collected underneath. Silence had hovered over my head, beauty multiplying in the air, the trees so transparent I felt like I could see through t something pure inside them. My chest ached then, too, this very same way.

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Sue Monk Kidd

The Secret Life of Bees

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Up until then I'd thought that white people and colored people getting along was the big aim, but after that I decided everybody being colorless together was a better plan. I thought of that policeman, Eddie Hazelwurst, saying I'd lowered myself to be in this house of colored women, and for the very life of me I couldn't understand how it had turned out this way, how colored women had become the lowest ones on the totem pole. You only had to look at them to see how special they were, like hidden royalty among us. Eddie Hazelwurst. What a shitbucket.

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Sue Monk Kidd

The Secret Life of Bees

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There was a time in Africa the people could fly. Mauma told me this one night when I was ten years old. She said, __andful, your granny-mauma saw it for herself. She say they flew over trees and clouds. She say they flew like blackbirds. When we came here, we left that magic behind._ She looked at my face, how it flowed with sorrow and doubt, and she said, "You don't believe me? Where you think these shoulder blades of yours come from, girl?"We weren't some special people who had lost our magic. We were slave people, and we weren't going anywhere. It was later I saw what she meant. We could fly all right, but it wasn't any magic to it.

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Sue Monk Kidd

The Invention of Wings

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The symbol of Goddess gives us permission. She teaches us to embrace the holiness of every natural, ordinary, sensual dying moment. Patriarchy may try to negate body and flee earth with its constant heartbeat of death, but Goddess forces us back to embrace them, to take our human life in our arms and clasp it for the divine life it is - the nice, sanitary, harmonious moment as well as the painful, dark, splintered ones.If such a consciousness truly is set loose in the world, nothing will be the same. It will free us to be in a sacred body, on a sacred planet, in sacred communion with all of it. It will infect the universe with holiness. We will discover the Divine deep within the earth and the cells of our bodies, and we will lover her there with all our hearts and all our souls and all our minds.

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Sue Monk Kidd

The Dance of the Dissident Daughter