THE MUSIC OF BEES by debut author Eileen Garvin deserves to be on your “to be read” list, especially if you are looking for a “feel good” story. Forgive me, but this novel has received plenty of “buzz,” including a LibraryReads selection for April and a starred review from Booklist which compared this quest for “belonging and stability” to writing by Anne Tyler or Sue Miller. Eileen Garvin, a beekeeper herself, definitely increased my interest in learning more about bees, including picking up our library copy of Paige Embry’s Our native bees: America's endangered pollinators and the fight to save them. The characters in THE MUSIC OF BEES each face different challenges, but manage to form an unlikely bond. Alice is in her mid-forties, a widow redefining her priorities who essentially adopts two young men: Jake, now confined to a wheel chair after a foolish high school accident and Harry, a former felon with a serious self-confidence problem. Together, they work to expand an apiary for bees and fight a large pesticide company. A bit simplistic? Yes, but readers will enjoy growing with and rooting for these three and their friends and family.
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