Bah! BBB – ‘Like Bees To Honey’ by Caroline Smailes

I have a signed copy of ‘Like Bees To Honey‘ by Caroline Smailes to give away today. Caroline swumg by the blog for a chat when it was first published – you can read the interview with her here.

And I love this review of her book, by Kathryn Eastman and first published on The Nut Press

You know that feeling you sometimes get when you step off an aeroplane in a Mediterranean country and the warm air envelops you like a deep sigh? Your whole body relaxes and that’s the moment when you realise that you’re in a foreign country, and now properly away from home.

That’s how it feels to open the pages of Like Bees to Honey and start reading.

The book opens in Manchester airport as Nina and her son board a plane to Malta. Nina is attempting to see her parents and make peace with them. After having been disowned by them for falling pregnant with Christopher while at university in England, she was not allowed into their house the last time she was on the island.

Now, this isn’t the holiday island you or I will ever visit. Or, at least, I don’t think it is! The Malta of Like Bees to Honey is a transit lounge for recently deceased spirits and somehow Nina’s son, Christopher, enables her to see them, speak with them and help them. And, in return, they help Nina come to terms with her own loss. One so great that she has yet to admit it to herself.

Being surrounded by dead people, spirits in transition and ghosts may sound creepy and disturbing, potentially the stuff of my nightmares, but they’re written so well as to be a non-threatening and even comforting presence throughout the book. I accepted them as readily as the living characters in the book. Perhaps because some of them have more of a life than the living and, therefore, seem just as “alive” and real. One of my personal favourites is a two-pint beer-swigging Jesus, who wears red nail polish on his toes and accepts presents of Cadbury’s chocolate. Now that’s my kind of son of God.

Like Bees to Honey is a wonderfully poignant and beautifully written story about loss and redemption and families and belonging.

Nina was forced to leave her family, its culture, customs and country behind, when she started her own family in her adoptive country of England. As Like Bees to Honey traces the return to her home island of Malta, it introduced me to a country that I didn’t know at all. One of the things I love about travelling, whether in reality or through the medium of a book, is being able to get a sense of place. Each chapter begins with an excerpt from a travel guide, so I immediately learnt something interesting about Malta, the setting for the majority of the book. The cooking rituals and featured recipes further helped me get to know Malta through its food. Even if I go somewhere for a short space of time, I try and learn a couple of simple phrases. Caroline incorporates Maltese words and phrases into the book and, each time she uses them, she cleverly includes their translation underneath. This reinforces their meaning far more effectively than any glossary at the back of the book ever would have done and, by not having to flip back and forth in the book, there is no interruption to the story’s flow. I felt as if I were learning Maltese alongside Nina who is re-learning what has almost become a foreign language to her.

Caroline recently posted some photos of sights and places on Malta which inspired the book on Facebook. It was strange browsing through them because they felt more like illustrations than actual photos. It was just how I imagined the island to be from having read Like Bees to Honey. Proof if any were needed that a talented and skilled author, such as Caroline Smailes, can paint all the word pictures you need in order to conjure up the world of a book.

I know this will sound strange after lauding Caroline’s ability to create but another aspect of the book that I enjoyed and appreciated were the empty spaces. What I mean is that the book formats gaps (or breathing spaces, as I liked to see them) between words and paragraphs. Together with different fonts, page edging and letters written but never sent, these all work together to help build the pace and atmosphere of the book. I shifted up or down reading gear, accordingly, to take in who was talking, what was happening, or simply to enjoy a description of a taste, smell or sound, like that of flip-flops on cobbles.

If the beautiful cover alone doesn’t convince you, then the blurb on the back cover promises that “Like Bees to Honey … is a magical tale that will live with you long after you finish reading.” It is, and does. And the beauty of such a book is that you only ever have to reach for it and open it to find yourself right back in amongst the magic all over again. I hope you find your way there very soon because it’s a wonderful place to spend some time.

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If you’d like the signed copy – and you know you do – just leave a ‘Pick Me!’ comment. And if you want to, donate £2/$3 to one of the Bah! charities.

The winner will be drawn next Saturday. I expect I’ll be giving something else good away then too.

15 Responses

  1. Angi says:

    Please pick me!

  2. Mason Canyon says:

    This sounds like a great book. I’ve read several reviews of it and the reviewers all loved it. It has such an adorable cover.

    Mason
    Thoughts in Progress

  3. Irene Wright says:

    I feel I can relate to this book. Have been to Malta several times – wonderful country, lovely people and food is brilliant/scrummy. As to being away from family, I am 12,000 miles away from mine. Out of sight, out of mind I think they view me. Because they NEVER contact me – it’s always me who send the e-mails, phone calls, etc. Well, now the worm has turned. I’m not going to contact them and we’ll see who e-mails me first!!! Anyway, brilliant book review – would love to win it or if not, I’ll certainly be looking out for it to buy. Thank you.

  4. AliB says:

    Sounds fascinating. I love being taken to a new place – heaven, earth or in between. Count me in for the picking time!
    Ta
    AliB

  5. Lucy says:

    Great review, sounds like a tale you can really get your teeth into. Hope I’m lucky!!

  6. Gaynor Lewis says:

    Please can I also put in a plea for this book:
    Malta was the first place I visited after my breast cancer experience.
    once had a boyfriend who was stationed there at RAF Luqa which is now the airport. When I waved him goodbye in 1966, little did I think I would actually see “his” island 40 years later.
    My late father had fond memories of the island saying sailing into Valletta harbour on the troop ship coming home from the Middle East at the end of the war was wonderful because the landscape was green – the first they had seen for years.

  7. Annette Thomas says:

    Would love to win, sounds a great book to read by a pool in the sun!

  8. I love the sound of this book -please pick me as I’d be so honoured to have a signed copy!

  9. Sandie says:

    Hi Steph,
    Hope you have a peaceful and happy day today – weather great up here in the high North Pennines – would love to be included in the ‘pick me’ line-up for this great signed book – I had one but gave it to a deserving friend :0(

    Sandie x

  10. Steph says:

    Fabulous, I am entering even though I’ve read it already (but mine isn’t signed, so this one is obviously far, far better!).

  11. Mini says:

    Pick me pick me :)

  12. Ooh, pick me please!

  13. Brigita says:

    Pick me, pick me!! :-)

  14. Stephanie says:

    Hello new Bah! visitors and good luck to all!

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