Why did I love this book?
I loved this book because it brought me back to the time I started beekeeping on the roof of the San Francisco Chronicle. Like Jukes, I was enthralled, enchanted, and curious. And 100 percent totally freaked out. Could I keep these creatures alive? What if they swarmed to a nearby office building or restaurant?
Jukes does her homework before being gifted a colony of honey bees. Through many trips to the library, she shares the ancient history, weird science, and mythological admiration humankind has always had for Beekind. Jukes is going through a difficult time in her life when she gets her bees, and her new hive ends up helping her find purpose and recenter herself.
I love how her memoir delves into the intelligence and wonder of bees yet also respects their wildness and how, as beekeepers, we need to support the honey bees’ natural instincts rather than force them to serve our will. She shows how psychically soothing bees can be.
2 authors picked A Honeybee Heart Has Five Openings as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.
'This book has found a special place in my heart. It's as strange, beautiful and unexpected, as precise and exquisite in its movings, as bees in a hive. I loved it' Helen Macdonald, author of H IS FOR HAWK
'Everyone should own A Honeybee Heart Has Five Openings, which moved and delighted me more than a book about insects had any right to ... Jukes is a gloriously gifted writer and her book ought to become a key text of this bright moment in our history of nature writing' Alex Preston, Observer
'Finely written and insightful' Melissa Harrison, Guardian
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