Synopses & Reviews
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.
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 fromhundreds 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 surround 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.
Review
"With this elegant new book, Holley Bishop joins Sue Hubbell and Edwin Way Teale as one of the most engaging ambassadors to bees we've ever had. Written with grace and wit...as seductive as an open jar of tupelo honey."andlt;BRandgt; -- Robert Michael Pyle, author of andlt;iandgt;Chasing Monarchsandlt;/iandgt;
Review
"Bishop's book reads like a novel -- the narrative unfolding like an escapist yarn or film, with Bishop and her bees as the players and the humid fields of Florida as her stage."andlt;BRandgt; -- andlt;iandgt;The Salt Lake Tribuneandlt;/iandgt;
Review
"Holley Bishop's love affair with honeybees combines natural and social history with gastronomy and memoir to produce a delicious reading experience."andlt;BRandgt; -- Michael Pollan, author of andlt;iandgt;The Botany of Desireandlt;/iandgt;
Synopsis
Honey has been waiting almost ten million years for a good biography. Bees have been making this prized food -- for centuries the world's only sweetener -- for millennia, but we humans started recording our fascination with it only in the past few thousand years. Part history, part love letter, andlt;iandgt;Robbing the Beesandlt;/iandgt; is a celebration of bees and their magical produce, revealing the varied roles of bees and honey in nature, world civilization, business, and gastronomy. andlt;BRandgt; andlt;BRandgt; To help navigate the worlds and cultures of honey, Bishop -- beekeeper, writer, and honey aficionado -- apprentices herself to Donald Smiley, a professional beekeeper who harvests tupelo honey in the Florida panhandle. She intersperses the lively lore and science of honey with lyrical reflections on her own and Smiley's beekeeping experiences. Its passionate research, rich detail, and fascinating anecdote and illustrations make Holley Bishop's andlt;iandgt;Robbing the Beesandlt;/iandgt; a sumptuous look at the oldest, most delectable food in the world.
About the Author
andlt;Bandgt;Holley Bishop,andlt;/Bandgt; a beekeeper for six years, has spent thousands of hours observing bees, harvesting honey, and amassing a collection of related books, gadgets, and stories. A graduate of Brown University, she completed a degree at the Columbia University School of Journalism and has worked in book publishing and written for numerous magazines.
Table of Contents
Contents introductions
1 Swamp Cache
2 The Bee Master
FEAR
3 Robbing the Bees
RESPECT
4 Pollination
5 The Sting
ARROGANCE
6 Food, Wine, and Fishing
TIME
7 Liquid Currency
8 Wax
9 Medicine Ball
GRATITUDE
10 Some Honey Recipes, Old and New
illustration credits
a final note
acknowledgments
index
A Conversation with Holley Bishop
A Few Final Words from Donald Smiley