Sweetness and Light: The Mysterious History of the Honey Bee
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Average customer review:Product Description
The bee is the most studied creature on the planet after man, and down the ages this insect and its honey have been harnessed by doctors, philosophers, scientists, politicians, artists, writers and architects as both metaphor and material. In her buzzing narrative, Hattie Ellis tells how all these people have found inspiration in the honey bee.
We also discover some of the mysterious ways of bees - how they can make up to 24,000 journeys to produce a pound of honey, with each bee producing one teaspoonful in a lifetime; we see how, charmingly, they communicate by dances; and we look under the lid of the hive to find as many as 100,000 bees living and working in total discipline. But we witness their dark side, too - such as the savage, untamed energy of the swarms of killer African bees that are sweeping through America. We also explore some of the many unsolved questions surrounding the honey bee, some of them at the very cutting edge of contemporary medical research.
The bee existed long before man; and without bees, we would soon start to die. Hattie Ellis shows us how this small insect can tell us more about ourselves than any other living creature. (20040704)
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #521032 in Books
- Published on: 2005-04-11
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 304 pages
Editorial Reviews
Independent
'Like the densely packed honeycomb of the hive, her book is jam-packed with information, ideas, stories and questions ... fascinating'
Review
'A charming insight into the sweetness and dark side of the honeybee ... the history of an international creature that provides a neat reflection of humanity' (Observer )
'Like the densely packed honeycomb of the hive, her book is jam-packed with information, ideas, stories and questions ... fascinating' (Independent )
'Richly informative and beautifully written' (The Times )
'Ellis's wonderful book tells us much more than simply how honey is made. It's a remarkable addition to the literatures of natural and social history.' (Tom Boncza-Tomaszewski, Independent on Sunday< )
'Ellis is the bee's knees' ( The Guardian )
'Entertaining and thoroughly worthwhile' (John Carey, The Sunday Times )
The Times
'Richly informative and beautifully written'
Customer Reviews
Wildlife and wonder on your doorstep
The title comes from a quote by Jonathan Swift, that by filling their hives with honey and wax, honey bees give mankind two of the noblest of things - sweetness and light. Ellis explores the bee in history, includes a little biology and the bee in art. But the chapters which really enraptured me were about the rediscovery of the benefits of honey, descriptions of Parisian honey shops and New York apiarists and the sad distance between ourselves and our world and the bleak future we have handed these miraculous and mysterious fellow creatures through pesticides. A thoughtful, charming book.
