
Say Goodbye to Summer with 5 Books about Bees
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I’ve always loved bees. To my father’s chagrin, I got my first tattoo when I was 22 years old–a honey bee on the left side of my back. It hurt, but the moment I saw the bee in the mirror, I loved him.
The bee has now been with me for five years and to celebrate the anniversary, I popped by a tattoo studio in London and had him upgraded, adding colour, lengthening wings and overall making him a little more organic. I love the tattoo just as much as I did before, but now it’s brighter and looks more ‘complete’, for want of a better word.
When I was 20 (and 21), I went through a horrible few months of depression and anxiety. It was a rotten time that I hope never to re-live again. Every day was a battle to just get out of bed and get through the day. It was miserable. On my 21st birthday, a friend of mine gave me a little silver chain with a bee hanging from it. Bees, she told me, are hardworking, self sufficient, intelligent and strong. She said the moment she saw it, it reminded her of me.
Not long after, the dark clouds started to clear. The world seemed better. Life moved on. My affection for bees was solidified and I seek them out on the flowers every summer, amazed at their capacity and relentless diligence.
Bees are dying at a prolific rate with colony collapse disorder consistently threatening bee populations, both for managed colonies and wild populations. You might think you don’t like honey, but bees are pollinators and a third of all food consumed in the US is the product of that pollination– from fruit to coffee beans. Pesticides, climate change and disease are affecting bees too. Without them, the global food network will become less varied and more expensive. It is a legitimate environmental crisis.
I’ve taken to reading as many books about bees as I can– fiction, non fiction, poetry, it doesn’t matter. Below is a list of my top five. Not many people realise how incredible bees are- some of these books about bees shed a little light on them.
Dave Goulson has been pottering through fields and meadows seeking information about insects for decades. Even as a child, he was obsessed- which is perhaps why this book is such a delight. This is pop science at its very best- accessible but smart. While I was reading, I found myself Googling and going down the rabbit hole of bee history.