Two men decide to become beekeepers, learning about nature and about themselves in the process
Roger Morgan-Grenville was a soldier in the Royal Green Jackets from 1978 to 1986. After leaving the army he ran a small company developing kitchenware. In 2007, he helped to set up the charity Help for Heroes. This is his fourth book.
Beekeeping builds from lark to revelation in this carefully
observed story of midlife friendship. Filled with humour and
surprising insight, Liquid Gold is as richly rewarding as its
namesake. Highly recommended.
*Thor Hanson, author of Buzz: The Nature and Necessity of Bees*
A great book. Painstakingly researched, but humorous, sensitive and
full of wisdom. I'm on the verge of getting some bees as a
consequence of reading the book.
*Chris Stewart, author of Driving Over Lemons*
Liquid Gold is a book that ignites joy and warmth through a layered
and honest appraisal of bee-keeping. Roger Morgan-Grenville deftly
brings to the fore the fascinating life of bees but he also
presents in touching and amusing anecdotes the mind-bending
complexities and frustrations of getting honey from them. But like
any well-told story from time immemorial, he weaves throughout a
silken thread, a personal narrative that is at once self-effacing,
honest and very human. In this book you will not only meet the
wonder of bees but the human behind the words.
*Mary Colwell, author of Curlew Moon*
Peppered with fascinating facts about bees, Liquid Gold is a
compelling and entertaining insight into the life of the beekeeper.
But it's much more than that. It's the story of a life at a
crossroads when a series of random events sets the author off on a
different, and more satisfying, path. It's a tale of friendship and
fulfilment, stings and setbacks, successes and failures and finding
meaning in midlife.
*WI Life*
Behind the self-deprecating humour, Morgan-Grenville's childlike
passion for beekeeping lights up every page. His bees are a conduit
to a connection with nature that lends fresh meaning to his life.
His bee-keeping, meanwhile, proves both a means of escape from the
grim state of the world and a positive way of doing something about
it. We could probably all do with some of that.
*Dixe Wills, BBC Countryfile Magazine*
A light-hearted account of midlife, a yearning for adventure, the
plight of bees, the quest for "liquid gold" and, above all,
friendship.
*Sunday Telegraph*
[A] delightfully told story ... Wryly humorous with fascinating
facts about bees, it charts the author's own mid-life story and the
joys of making discoveries.
*Choice magazine*
The reader will learn plenty about bees and beekeeping from this
book, although it is about as far from a manual as possible. Liquid
Gold is a well observed delve into the hobbyist's desire to find
what is important in life, no matter their age or preparedness.
*The Irish News*
[A] delightful exploration of the world of bees and their honey ...
a hymn to the life-enhancing connection with the natural world that
helped Morgan-Grenville reconcile himself to the fading of the
light that is middle age.
*Country & Town House magazine*
Both humorous and emotionally affecting ... Morgan-Grenville's wry
and thoughtful tale demonstrates why an item many take for granted
should, in fact, be regarded as liquid gold.
*Publishers Weekly*
[A] story of friendship and ... also a convincing portrait of a
midlife crisis [with] some nice sly humour
*Daily Mail, Books for Christmas 2020*
This delightful memoir is an inspiring account of changing
direction in mid-life, and a passionate plea on behalf of the
honeybee.
*Daily Mail, Must Reads*
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