- Joined
- Nov 9, 2018
- Messages
- 985
- Reaction score
- 929
- Location
- Rainham, Medway (North Kent) UK
- Hive Type
- National
- Number of Hives
- 44 plus 17 managed for another
This came a couple of days ago! I guess most people first dream of beekeeping as a couple of hives (white WBCs) in the bottom of the garden. This is a book that was waiting to be written. As you would expect from Richard Rickitt (co-editor of BeeCraft) everything about this book is a delight. It begins (and I haven't gone much beyond that) with a wide perspective of why people might want to keep bees and how these aspirations fit into the place (and plight) of insects in the world today. A glance at the contents shows that this is a very complete book about beekeeping, whether or not the bees are in your garden. Perhaps the point is that the ability to continue to keep bees in your garden (and not irritate your neighbours) is very dependant on getting your beekeeping up to a standard that will ensure they quietly go about their business without upsetting anyone.
Also - and possibly this matters more to me than others - it is a well-designed book, as might be expected from Bloomsbury. I'm coming to think that books about bees published in the UK are a design-free area! Just because a book is self-published does not give an exemption on good design. I'm always amazed at how beautiful books are when I go to a bookshop. That's the world in which all books vie for attention.
Also - and possibly this matters more to me than others - it is a well-designed book, as might be expected from Bloomsbury. I'm coming to think that books about bees published in the UK are a design-free area! Just because a book is self-published does not give an exemption on good design. I'm always amazed at how beautiful books are when I go to a bookshop. That's the world in which all books vie for attention.