I was alerted to this a while ago and snapped it up on Netgalley. I have to say it was one of the best novels so far this year and wow was is scarily relevant.
Enjoy!
ISBN-13: 978-1250269218
Publisher: Forge Books
Release Date: 3-7-2023
Length: 384pp
Source: Publisher for review
Buy It: Amazon/ B&N/ IndieBound
ADD TO: GOODREADS
Overview:
Julie Carrick Dalton's The Last Beekeeper is a celebration of found family, an exploration of truth versus power, and the triumph of hope in the face of despair."Fans of Delia Owens will swoon to find their new favorite author.” (Hank Phillippi Ryan)
It’s been more than a decade since the world has come undone, and Sasha Severn has returned to her childhood home with one goal in mind―find the mythic research her father, the infamous Last Beekeeper, hid before he was incarcerated. There, Sasha is confronted with a group of squatters who have claimed the quiet, idyllic farm as their own. While she initially feels threatened, the group soon becomes her newfound family, offering what she hasn't felt since her father was imprisoned: security and hope. Maybe it's time to forget the family secrets buried on the farm and focus on her future.
But just as she settles into her new life, Sasha witnesses the impossible. She sees a honey bee, presumed extinct. People who claim to see bees are ridiculed and silenced for reasons Sasha doesn't understand, but she can't shake the feeling that this impossible bee is connected to her father's missing research. Fighting to uncover the truth could shatter Sasha's fragile security and threaten the lives of her newfound family―or it could save them all.
Julie Carrick Dalton's The Last Beekeeper is a celebration of found family, an exploration of truth versus power, and the triumph of hope in the face of despair. It is a meditation on forgiveness and redemption and a reminder to cherish the beauty that still exists in this fragile world.
Also by Julie Carrick Dalton:
Waiting for the Night Song
Read an excerpt:
Sasha, Age 8
My bees will survive, Sasha promised herself as she crouched
in the dirt watching them die. A worker bee hauled a dead sibling to the
opening of the hive and launched the body onto a pile of her lifeless sisters
in the dirt below.
“Why are they dying?” Sasha whispered to her father, his
head so close to hers his whiskers brushed her cheek.
He rubbed his face with stiff, arthritic hands and crawled
closer to the hive. “Come here.”
He put a hand on the pine box. Sasha did the same.
“What do you feel?” he asked.
“Wood?” The smooth grain gave slightly under her fingernails
as she pressed harder.
“What else?” Warmth brewing inside the hive overpowered the
shade cast by oak branches.
“It’s hot. And buzzing.”
“Bees hum at the exact pitch of a G note, like on Mom’s
piano,” her father said, pipe smoke infused in his shirt mixing with lavender
in the breeze.
“How do they know the note?” She pressed her ear to the side
of the hive, vibrations tickling the inner parts of her ear.
“They just know. They communicate with signals only bees understand.”
With her cheek still flush against the hive, Sasha looked at
her father and blinked three slow, deliberate blinks, scrunching her eyes tight
each time.
“What are you doing?” he asked.
“Sending a signal only you can understand.” Again, she stared
at him and blinked three times.
He furrowed his brow as if concentrating. “I love you, too.”
Her father placed one hand on the hive and the other on
Sasha’s shoulder, his callused skin chafing her sunburn. The hum disoriented
her until she felt as if she hovered above the ground. The buzzing grew louder,
filling her skull, telegraphing secret signals down her neck and arms to warm
her fingertips.
“That note is a part of you now.” His words hung in the
viscous air. “It’s a huge responsibility to be tuned to the pitch of a bee.”
For a moment Sasha could see the air—particles, sound waves,
breath—moving like liquid around her. She parted her lips to taste the sizzle
of lavender and wax.
A loud chirp startled Sasha and she pulled her ear away from
the hive.
“This is Lawrence.” Her father answered his phone and walked
toward the farmhouse, leaving Sasha alone with her bees and the vibrations
destined to tremble under her skin long after the hives fell silent.
Sasha’s 22nd Birthday
Sasha stepped off the sour-smelling bus hoping the taste of
chaff in the air would guide her back to the farmhouse. Every night since her
father had gone to prison, she had visualized walking up the sagging porch
stairs, retracing the familiar path down the hall, fingertips recounting each
dent in the scuffed chair rail, every flourish in the wrought-iron heat vents.
She hadn’t been this close to her childhood home in eleven
years, but it had never felt farther away.
The hydraulic bus door screeched as it slammed closed. Sasha
jumped sideways and the bus lurched away.
After six steps on the broken pavement, memory tingled in
her feet, her knees, and the thumping space in her chest. When she first landed
in state care, she used to spin herself dizzy to see if she could intuit which
direction led back to the farm. No matter how long she spun, and even if she
tripped or fell, she always recognized the beeline home before opening her
eyes.
Flanking the desolate road, fields that once swayed with
barley and rye now teemed with an untamed fervor that prodded at the dormant
wildness in Sasha. She yanked up a tuft of tall grass, clotted dirt clinging to
the roots. The earthy aroma, the precise mixture of life and decay that
punctuated her childhood, greeted her like an old friend and conjured a longing
to howl into the wind whipping her hair across her face.
Sometimes the vibrations in Sasha’s fingertips, ghosts of
the bees she and her father once tended, swarmed her with aggression, attacking
her from the inside. Too much lost when the bees died. Too much wrenched from
her tattered, younger self. Other days, the gentle hum enveloped Sasha in
tender, honey-soaked memories of her father’s beard and a world that had not
yet come undone.
She no longer whipped her head around to chase rogue
flickers in her peripheral vision. The barely audible hum of tiny, nonexistent
wings hovering close to her ear rarely tempted her to close her eyes and hope
anymore.
Her bees, like nearly all the pollinators, had disappeared
more than a decade ago.
As Sasha trudged up the final hill toward her childhood
home, the familiar buzz warmed her fingertips. She shook her hands out, forcing
blood into her fingers, and clapped to dispel the phantom hum.
She shouldn’t have waited so long to return home. She had
aged out of the state juvenile-care system four years ago. Since then, she had
relentlessly promised herself she’d return to find the research her father
buried. Soon, she repeated in her mind every night before slipping off to
sleep. Soon.
But she couldn’t take time off work from the bike shop. The
bus ticket cost too much. The walk from the bus stop was too long. Convenient
reasons to avoid home made staying away an easy habit, one she could no longer
indulge. Her father’s first parole hearing was scheduled in less than a month
and she intended to unearth the documents he buried before his release. If he
found them first, Sasha might never understand what she helped him hide all
those years ago. She might never understand the truth about why he chose prison
over her.
The media already hummed with news of the hearing. Will the
last beekeeper be released early? Will the last beekeeper’s daughter testify on
his behalf?
The letter from her father’s lawyer requesting her presence
at the parole hearing lay crumpled in a pocket of her backpack. Writing a
dispassionate note on her father’s behalf instead of appearing in person had
been the coward’s way out, but hadn’t she learned that maneuver from her dad,
who chose to hide behind his secrets instead of parenting his motherless child?
The first night Sasha spent in the state home, she made
herself three promises, and every night since she had renewed the vow before
going to sleep. Find the research. Understand the truth. Rebuild a family.
But now, as she took the first steps toward acting on her
oaths, she worried she wouldn’t find anything at the farm and would have
nothing left to promise herself, other than rebuilding a family, which seemed
more unlikely than unearthing the mythic lost documents.
Maybe it would be better not to try.
Dust from the road clung to the sticky saliva gathering in
the corners of her mouth. Sasha adjusted the backpack on her aching shoulders
and took a swig of water from a nearly empty bottle.
She stopped visiting her father in prison years ago. Not
because she didn’t love him, but because she couldn’t take the bullying by
other kids. But now, with the possibility of his imminent release, Sasha needed
to know what she helped her father bury in the field all those years ago. She
needed to understand why he chose to protect those documents instead of her.
And more than anything, she needed to finally understand if it had all been her
fault.
The weight of everything she owned thumped against her body
as she swung her violin case to maintain momentum as she approached the
driveway.
ABSOLUTELY NO TRESPASSING.
Hand-painted red letters on a sheet of plywood leaned
against a large rock marking the driveway.
Fucking squatters.
Technically, the farm had defaulted to state ownership when
her father went to prison. She had no legal claim, but this land belonged to
her and she to it. Local officials wouldn’t notice if she camped out for a few
nights. Squatters, however, would fight.
Sasha kicked the sign, the impact on the rubber toe of her
boot reverberating in her knee. This was her home. She kicked it again,
cracking the brittle wood, but not breaking it.
Sasha didn’t want a fight, but she refused to turn back.
What right did squatters have to turn her away?
She quickened her pace and passed the weatherworn barn that
had once been her mother’s workshop. Her eyes stung as she faced the house she
had been dreaming of for years, but her dehydrated body failed to conjure
tears. The garden spilled onto the driveway in a tangled mess. Shutters hung at
odd angles. A dry sob stuck in her throat when she saw the silvery leaves of
her mother’s unruly lavender, lording over the weeds.
The tire swing she and her father used to beat like a
piñata to vent their frustrations twisted in the wind, the rusty chain
creaking with the familiar groan that made Sasha’s knees wobble.
She drank the last swallow of water, dropped her pack to the
ground, and ignored the buzz building in her ears. It’s not real. They’re gone.
She knelt on the ground and leaned her elbows on her pack,
taking in the familiar but altered scene. A tower of rusty bike wheels impaled
on a spike stood in front of the porch. Of all things to survive time and
looters. The day she and her father moved her hives to hide them in the forest,
she had marked the hives’ location with the sculpture, a monument to all she
and her father failed to protect.
As she ran a finger absentmindedly over the cracked leather
of her violin case, something landed on the handle.
At first, she mistook the insect for debris carried by the
wind, but the wind had stilled. Her throat tightened as the shiny stinger
twitched.
A bee. Her skin burned with the decades-old guilt of her
role in the demise of the final bee colony. The last of their kind.
No one had seen a honey bee in the wild for eleven years.
Yet there it sat. A bee. A perfect, beautiful bee, taunting
her. Haunting her.
Apis mellifera, her father’s voice boomed in her mind.
The Earth seemed to stutter on its axis as Sasha stared at
the fuzzy body, the threadlike antennae. As the bee rose into the air in front
of her, the whir of its wings stirred a faded memory as elusive as a forgotten
color.
The vibrato hummed in her teeth as the bee lowered itself to
walk across the violin case.
She squeezed her eyes shut against the mirage summoned by
her desperate need to believe some bees had survived.
She had spent her first eleven years helping her father tend
bees, and every year since trying to forget the hypnotic sound of being
surrounded by them.
Sasha, of all people, didn’t fall for the bee-sighting
hysteria. She knew the truth.
The bees were gone.
Sasha stared at the figment, willing it to dissipate. Was
she so weak her mind could conjure a bee to appease the empty, aching space in
her chest?
Entranced by the impossible creature—conjured by heat,
dehydration, or the shock of being home—Sasha didn’t notice the man emerging
from the farmhouse.
“Pick up your pack and turn around,” he shouted, a rifle on
his shoulder aimed at Sasha’s chest.
Sasha jumped to her feet, knocking her pack over. “Pilgrims
are no longer welcome here.”
When she looked down, the imaginary bee had vanished.
My Review:
The Last Beekeeper
Julie Carrick Dalton
What would it be like if all the world’s pollinators went extinct, well Dalton’s latest eerily, scarily and all too relevant speculative/dystopian novel explores just that. Set sometime in the not-too-distant future the world’s agriculture has collapsed due to the extinction of the world’s pollinators leaving the landscape familiar yet alien at the same time. Large farms are replaced by giant glass greenhouses where humans pollinate plants that are only destined for the wealthy. Disease and hunger are rampant as the world tries to survive on crops that don’t need pollination, where the chasm between the haves and have nots is immense and the world’s inhabitants have to get inventive just to stay alive. Told in two timelines Sasha as a child and Sasha as an adult, Julie Carrick Dalton delivers an excellent, terrifyingly addictive storyline and fluid narrative and a cast of first-rate characters starting with the star of the read, Sasha. Sasha starts out as an enigma to readers but chapter after chapter they will see her true self revealed, will laugh, cry and get angry with and for her and cheer her on throughout the book. The other characters especially Sasha’s housemates are also unforgettable as is her friend Bassel. Fans of speculative fiction and alternate history and those who don’t like their novels tied up with a bow at the end will stay up all night to finish this unputdownable novel.
Eleven years ago the last pollinator left on earth, the
honeybee officially became extinct because of pollution, pesticides and man’s
greed and ignorance, and eleven year old Sasha Severn’s world fell apart when
her father, the last beekeeper and government scientist tasked with helping to
save them went to jail for illegally keeping a hive sending Sasha into the
foster care system. Now an adult Sasha’s had plenty of time to plot and plan
what to do when she gets out and that’s to head home. It takes her awhile and
when she gets to her childhood farmhouse it’s occupied by squatters, she needs
to befriend them, she needs to stay, but she also needs to keep her identity a
secret. She needs, in secret, to search for her father’s research hoping it can
answer questions she’s asked herself since the day they took her father to
prison. Questions like, what really happened to the bees and other pollinators
and what if anything did her father have to do with their extinction. But she’s
not the only one who wants her father’s research and she’s betrayed by one of
the people she was starting to think of as family.
About the author:
As a journalist, JULIE CARRICK DALTON has published more than a thousand articles in The Boston Globe, BusinessWeek, The Hollywood Reporter, Orion Magazine, Electric Literature, and other publications. A Tin House and Bread Loaf alum, and graduate of GrubStreet’s Novel Incubator, Dalton holds a master’s degree in literature and creative writing from Harvard Extension School. She is a frequent speaker on the topic of writing fiction in the age of climate crisis. A mom to four kids and two dogs, Dalton is an avid skier, hiker, and kayaker. A former beekeeper, she also farms a gorgeous tract of land in rural New Hampshire.
Ha well really I do like my novels tied up with a bow generally but sometimes there are times when its worth reading something that isn't. Sounds really good.
ReplyDeleteit was scarily good Kathryn
DeleteWell hello there. Now this sounds like one I could sink my teeth into!
ReplyDeleteOh yeah right up your alley Kim
DeleteOh no, not the bees, we are dea
ReplyDeleteyep pretty much
Delete