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“Honey
has been waiting almost ten million years for a good biography,” writes
Holley Bishop. Bees have been making this food on Earth for
hundreds of millennia, but we humans started recording our
fascination with it only in the past few thousand years—painting
bees and hives on cave and temple walls and papyrus scrolls,
revering them in poetry and art, even worshipping these amazing
little insects as gods. From the temples of the Nile to the
hives behind the author’s own house, people have had
a long, rapturous love affair with the beehive and the seductive,
addictive honey it produces. Combining passionate research,
rich detail, and fascinating anecdote, Holley Bishop’s Robbing
the Bees is an in-depth, sumptuous look at the oldest,
most delectable food in the world.
Part biography, part history, Robbing the
Bees is also a celebration, a love letter to bees and
their magical produce. Honey has played significant and varied
roles in civilization: it is so sweet that bacteria can’t
survive in it, so it was our first food preservative and
all-purpose wound salve. Honey wine, or mead, was the intoxicant
of choice long before beer or wine existed.Hindus believe
honey leads to a long life; Mohammed looked to honey as a
remedy for all illness. Virgil; Aristotle; Pythagoras; Gregor
Mendel; Sylvia Plath’s father, Otto; and Sir Edmund
Hillary are among the famous beekeepers and connoisseurs
who have figured in honey’s past and shaped its present. |
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To help navigate the worlds
and cultures of honey, Holley Bishop—beekeeper, writer,
and honey aficionado—apprentices herself to a modern
guide and expert, professional beekeeper Donald Smiley, who
harvests tupelo honey from hundreds of hives in the remote
town of Wewahitchka, Florida. Bishop chronicles Smiley’s
day-to-day business as he robs his bees in the steamy Florida
panhandle and provides an engaging exploration of the lively
science, culture, and lore that surrounds each step of the
beekeeping process and each stage of bees’ lives.
Interspersed throughout the narrative are
the author’s lyrical reflections on her own beekeeping
experiences, the business and gastronomical world of honey,
the myriad varieties of honey (as distinct as the provenance
of wine), as well as illustrations, historical quotes, and
recipes—ancient, contemporary, and some of the author’s
own creations. |
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