The Wizard of Sun City: The Strange True Story of Charles Hatfield, the Rainmaker Who Drowned a City's Dreams Review

The Wizard of Sun City: The Strange True Story of Charles Hatfield, the Rainmaker Who Drowned a City's Dreams
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The cover of this book, line drawings of flood victims anxiously retreating in the advance of a wall of water, foretell the ultimate result of the efforts of professional rainmakers Paul and Charles Hatfield. What lies between the covers is a very fascinating tale, almost an inversion of the Pied Piper saga, in a time when faith in near-science and pseudo meterology was not only believed, but (at least for a bit) sanctioned by the powers that be. This story provides a cautionary tale for those self-styled business folk who unfortunately believe a man's word is his bond, and a handshake forms an unbreakable contract.
Author Jenkins recreates the time and the mood of Southern California in the early 1900's and recreates an atmosphere of a blossoming community pinning its hopes on a sophisticated businessman with a simple proposition: Hatfield will fill a resevoir to its 15 BILLION gallon capacity for $10,000, or San Diego owes him nothing. Surely a sucker's bet, since annual rainfall for the area is less than a foot, Hatfield is given tacit approval to proceed with his venture.
The results far exceeded the imaginations of all parties involved, and the aftermath surely challenges one's belief in pseudo science and the unpredictability of the atmosphere.
The book's release date of July 2005 (a mere month or so prior to Hurricane Katrina) is almost eerie in its timing, in describing a cataclysm seemingly unimaginable for a town with a bright future and numerous prospects.
I'd highly recommend this book to fans of the turn of the last century, to municipal engineers and officials, to weather spotters and emergency planners, or even to just plain folk who like an enjoyable tale that still has a few surprises and twists to keep things interesting. Happy Reading!

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Maude (1883-1993): She Grew Up With the Country Review

Maude (1883-1993): She Grew Up With the Country
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Maude is not only a beautifully written tribute to a remarkable woman, but a wonderful chonicle of our country's growth towards maturity. Author Mardo Williams' newspaper background is apparent: He has a unique ability to mix important and meaningul historical details with the entertaining vignettes of rural life. That Mr. Williams knew his subject well is undisputed: He was the second child and only son born to Maude and her husband Lee. Much of what he writes was experienced or witnessed firsthand. It is particularly remarkable that he didn't begin writing this loving tribute to his mother and the early days of this century until he himself was 88 years of age. Maude-1883-1993: She Grew Up with the Country is a delight.

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The Kalevala: Epic of the Finnish People Review

The Kalevala: Epic of the Finnish People
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Friberg does a good job of translating the Kalevala into a readable English form. The Kalevala is a collection of 'Runos' or poems that were sung by storytellers. Friberg's translation is of the spirit of the stories. Some translations have tried to translate both the verse and the story making both dry and uninteresting. Frieberg concentrates on making the story read well in current English.

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National Epic of Finland. Epic narrative poetry, originally published in Finnish in 1849.

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American Musical Theatre: A Chronicle Review

American Musical Theatre: A Chronicle
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I just finished reading all 821 pages of this book (no pictures), and am very proud of myself for having done so.
This reference book chronicles Musical Theatre in America, show-by-show, starting in 1757 (!) and reaching all the way to 2000. Paragraphs are given for each show and can be found in chronological order of their opening nights. Revivals are also discussed on their opening nights.
Despite the repetitive setup of the book's information, Bordman is able for the most part to write entertaining yet dense descriptions of the show's plot, hit songs, message, and overall run. Although he spends more time on Musical Theatre's great hits (the biggest hits get a full page or two), some of Bordman's best writing moments come during his descriptions of some of Broadway's awful flops.
Other reviewers of this book criticize that Bordman has less to say about musicals since 1960. I find this also to be true in some respects. In Bordman's defense, this is in part due to the decline in Broadway's quality in the 1970s and 80s. Bordman clearly comes from the camp of critics who feel that The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas and Cats, while popular, are not as artistically relevant as Oklahoma! and Show Boat. Bordman is also no fanatic of Sondheim, as well, although he recognizes his lyric-writing genius. For these reasons, the book gets four stars.
Having read the entire book, however, I must say that I know a lot more about American Musical Theatre than I did before, and probably know more by reading this book than by reading any other. For libraries this book is a MUST have. It's not cheap, but neither is any other 900-page hardcover book. If you are looking for the ultimate reference on American Musical Theatre, this is it.

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War with Mexico: America's Reporters Cover the Battlefront (Modern War Studies) Review

War with Mexico: America's Reporters Cover the Battlefront (Modern War Studies)
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Journalists embedded with U.S. troops attacking on foreign soil; uncensored news from the front reaches citizens before official Washington; news reports with a political or social slant, glorifying events to a red, white and blue hue. Sound familiar? Is it Vietnam, Iran, Iraq or Afghanistan? Nope. It is Mexico in 1846.
This book chronicles the story of the Mexican War through the eyes of America's war correspondents. There were at least thirteen full time reporters covering the campaign from the first battles in northern Mexico under General Zachary Taylor to the surrender of Mexico City under General Winfield Scott. Of these, one was a woman, Jane McManus Storms of the New York Sun, who covered the siege of Veracruz in 1847 from the Mexican perspective. Eleven of the men reported for one of the New Orleans newspapers and six of these worked for the New Orleans Picayune alone, New Orleans being closest to the theater of operations. What is particularly amazing is how quickly news reports made their way from the field to press and then to the rest of the country. How it got out at all, much less faster than through official channels sometimes boggles the mind.
The book not only details the story of war reporting but also discusses the rise of commercial journalism, the penny press, and that relationship with the battlefield reporters. One of the results of this relationship is the fact that the press begins to have a definite impact on national politics and opinions. The story told here really hits home as the authors give ample space to the reporters themselves and the reader thence has his own boots on the ground.

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Zen Poems (Everyman's Library Pocket Poets) Review

Zen Poems (Everyman's Library Pocket Poets)
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This collection of poems from various authors captures, for me anyway, the spirit of zen being. They have a immediacy which touches you directly transporting you by their power, to the situation or place they describe. Reading them is an act of meditation in so far as it directs the mind to a place of calm. Highly recommended

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The appreciation of Zen philosophy and art has become universal, and Zen poetry, with its simple expression of direct, intuitive insight and sudden enlightenment, appeals to lovers of poetry, spirituality, and beauty everywhere. This collection of translations of the classical Zen poets of China, Japan, and Korea includes the work of Zen practitioners and monks as well as scholars, artists, travelers, and recluses, ranging from Wang Wei, Hanshan, and Yang Wanli, to Shinkei, Basho, and Ryokan.

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My First Tractor: Stories of Farmers and Their First Love Review

My First Tractor: Stories of Farmers and Their First Love
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What a wonderful book! I have no farming background but I found the various stories of the fond memories of the authors' first tractors fascinating and heart warming. There seemed to always be some regret about the move from horse to tractor power but mostly there was an appreciation of the ability to get the farm work done much more quickly. On the other hand, there was an agreement that tractors now have gone too far in removing farmers from the land.
Many of the stories tell of being grabbed as a young child as they almost flew off the tractor since they all rode along with dad or grandpa while plowing the field at one time or another. The stories of yearning to be tall enough to drive the tractor by themselves and the wonderful tales of that rite of passage are priceless.
Just like real car repair men are a treasured find these days, so are the old farmers with their connection to real tractors and the land.

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Child of Dandelions Review

Child of Dandelions
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Wow. Highly recommended. My grade 7 and 8 students were thoroughly engaged with this book. One of them was so inspired that she is visiting Africa this summer with her family.
A very rich story that illustrates a historical period that has been completely overlooked in the West. It is especially successful in touching issues of class, race and nationhood.
Despite the violence and chaos that this tragedy created, I love how Nanji tells the story without issuing judgment.
This book also helped my students understand life in Africa, which is something we don't come across much in our curriculum.
A must read.


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Seed to Seed: The Secret Life of Plants Review

Seed to Seed: The Secret Life of Plants
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You know about writer's block, the frightening state of an author who just cannot come up with another idea about which to write. Nicholas Harberd had researcher's block. He had done plenty of work as a laboratory scientist, working out the biochemical mechanisms of some very basic capabilities of growth in plants. Having gotten some answers, there turned out to be more and deeper questions (the familiar pattern that will keep science going forever), but he was not inspired into a next project. What to do? Part of the charm of his book, _Seed to Seed: The Secret Life of Plants_ (Bloomsbury) is that he lets us know how he as a working scientist came to solve that problem. He lets us in on some biological secrets, as he opens up some of the mechanisms that are at the core of what roots and shoots do. Best of all, he gives himself, and imparts to us, a higher appreciation for the natural world, invoking a mystic unity inspired by science, and an appreciation for all the paradoxes that this entails.
The specific subject of Harberd's research and his book is _Arabidopsis thaliana_, the thale-cress, a humble weed which has gained stardom as the first plant to have its DNA entirely sequenced. To dismantle the block that has left him uninspired to start up any new project, Harberd started a journal for 2004 to record the history of one thale-cress plant; this book is his journal. His selected plant isn't one of the thousands of plants in his lab, but one in the wild, for which he (and the reader) come to have interest and affection. In watching the plant, he describes for himself and for us the intricate dance between DNA, RNA, and the proteins for which they code. By experimentation, and there is a good deal described in these pages, the exquisitely fine-tuned molecular symphony takes place; even in the humble root of this humble plant there are regulators, and regulators to regulate the regulators, and so on in dizzying iterations.
It is fair to ask what use all this detailed knowledge is. Even his daughter, when being told about proteins that restrain the growth of plants, wants Harberd to use them on a neighbor's sycamore that increasingly is shading their garden. The real goal, Harberd says, is not utility (although it is certainly possible that plants are going to be improved the better we know the details of their molecular workings). And for him, the real goal is also not simply a better understanding of how the molecules do their jobs. "I'm more motivated by the sense that understanding brings me closer to Nature. That there's a link between understanding and reverence." It is a pleasure to read Harberd's musings on how nature may be perceived as a unity in different ways, how his plant is so connected with the air and soil around it that distinctions between those entities seem artificial, or how, if one considers the sun as the nucleus of a globe defined by the spread of its light, then the plants which respond to the light, their germinated seeds, and those of us who live on plants, are all parts of the sun. Harberd has done a wonderful job of telling what a scientist goes through, how decisions get made about what sort of work should be done next, and even about the difficulties of getting published. These are not reflections strictly confined to plant biology, and while _Seed to Seed_ has within it a great deal of explanation about molecular complexity, it is best in its vivid musings on how science can reflect nature and bring us closer to it.


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Orphan of the Sun Review

Orphan of the Sun
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This is a story - a mystery - told from the point of view of an adolescent girl. There are all the best parts of any teenage girl book: growing awareness of self, growing awareness of romance, growing awareness of the world. There are people who, in the words of GWB, misunderestimate Meryt. Meryt is chief among them.
Additionally, there are fantastic details of the world in which Meryt resides. It's not told in a clinical way, though, but instead in so natural a manner that you feel a part of ancient Egypt.
The plot is sufficiently complex and is well developed. The supporting characters are also very well developed, and some you will like, while some you will... not like so much. Meryt, though, is a wonderful character with whom most girls will relate readily.
A great read for a girl - be she 15 or 35.
(*)>

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Fever Dream Review

Fever Dream
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After pre-ordering the book on kindle, I read the book in one sitting. I must say that Preston-Child are showing some love back to Prendergast series after the last couple of mis-haps ( yes, wheel of darkness quite ruined the series for me ). This book gets basic elements right and tells a compelling story set in the heart of American south.
In my humble opinion, there are three sets of Pendergast series. The first three belong to the great series, namely, Relic, Reliquary and Cabinet of curiosities. The second set is the "Diogenes" series ( Brimstone, Dance of death and Book of the dead ), which are quite good reads, but could get repetitive. The third set is purely commercial breaks between solo projects of each authors ( Still life..,Wheel of darkness and recent Cemetery dance ).
This book signals the return to form for the authors. Recurring characters are kept to a minimum and story is fast paced with thriller elements. Sherlockian style is quite visible here more than any other novels. Also the books seems to leave quite loose ends of the story for continuation in another book, but is not quite unwelcome. We would love another great story by the authors.
One nagging doubt for me is if the authors are getting themselves into a corner with Pendergast. Since the last 4-5 books dealt with similar theme around Pendergast's family, the series is getting quite contrite. A change of scenery may be good. Also, the pre-climax action sequence of the book is vaguely familiar to a recent book by one of the authors and if you were reading them back to back, similarities are hard to mess ( leverage the research, is not a bad idea, but might have been too soon ! ).
In summary, Fever Dream is quite worth the wait and signals a renewed comeback for our favorite FBI agent and loyal lieutenant. Go for it !

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T. S. Eliot (Lives & Legacies (Oxford)) Review

T. S. Eliot (Lives and Legacies (Oxford))
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For an installment in an Oxford University Press series called "Lives and Legacies", T. S. ELIOT contains surprisingly little about Eliot's life and it discusses his legacy even less. What it is is an intelligent and scholarly, yet readable, overview of Eliot's writings, principally his poetry. If, like me, you already are a fan of Eliot's poetry, I recommend the book. If you are not a fan, I doubt this book will turn you into one or otherwise do much for you.
To me, reading the book was most notable for encouraging the reader to look at Eliot's poetry as a body of work, as one extended poem. Over the years I have read many of Eliot's poems multiple times, but - in part, no doubt, because they are so complex and fecund - I have tended to think of the poems, or even discrete parts or stanzas, in isolation. Raine attempts to present Eliot's work as "one significant, consistent and developing personality." Towards that end, he identifies and explicates two overarching themes in particular: the failure to live fully (either as illustrated in the poems or ruefully recognized by many of the voices of the poems), and "classicism", an aesthetic stance that is skeptical of theatrical, exaggerated emotion (i.e., anti-Romantic). Raine also registered a point with me in describing Eliot's poetry as "impersonal", in the sense that in order to appreciate it a reader need know little or nothing about the biographical background of its author (unlike, for example, Sylvia Plath).
Raine makes his way through Eliot's oeuvre more or less chronologically, though his rather brief discussion of "Prufrock" is postponed until the middle of the book. He devotes one chapter each to "The Waste Land" and "Four Quartets", and then individual chapters to Eliot's dramas and to his literary criticism. For me, the first two chapters were the most rewarding, in part because they include insightful discussion of several of the lesser known (and, thus, less written about) poems - for example, "Animula", "Gerontion", and "Marina".
Raine's book is NOT a "reader's guide". He does not attempt, thankfully, to explicate each and every line of each and every poem. He confines himself to the thematic points he wishes to make, and he avoids the drudgery and stuffiness of an Oxford don (though he long taught there). Nonetheless, in discussing sources, models, and influences, he obviously draws on impressive Eliot scholarship. By and large, his writing is spare and taut, somewhat poetic and much less verbose than the typical texts of poetry criticism/exposition. (Still, there are quite a few 50-cent words, such as "oneiric" and "euphistically".)
At the end of this relatively brief book there is a lengthy (30-page) Appendix in which Raine discusses the charge, delivered by many critics, that T.S. Eliot was anti-Semitic. Here the tone of the book changes and Raine engages in rather prosaic academic polemics. I don't follow all of Raine's arguments in defense of Eliot, but then neither do I follow many of the accusers' arguments. For the general reader, it perhaps suffices to report that in Raine Eliot has an intelligent and reasoned defender, and before anyone (based on reading Anthony Julius, George Steiner, Louis Menand, etc.) mentally pigeonholes Eliot as an anti-Semite, in fairness they should read Raine's Appendix.
I bought the so-called "hardcover" edition. It is rather cheap and tacky, surprisingly so for a publication by such an august publishing house. The cover is some sort of pressed cardboard (I don't know the precise term) with a glossy finish on which the cover photo and text are directly emblazoned - i.e., there is no dust jacket. The edges of the pages are almost coterminous with the edges of the cover, and the paper itself is ordinary. The book is "bound" - more accurately, glued - indifferently, so that the first few pages of my copy have been given permanent waves in close to the gathering. These rather mediocre production features probably influence my four-star assessment.

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The Concord Quartet: Alcott, Emerson, Hawthorne, Thoreau and the Friendship That Freed the American Mind Review

The Concord Quartet: Alcott, Emerson, Hawthorne, Thoreau and the Friendship That Freed the American Mind
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This book is a nice overview of the lives of four key authors who spent most of their time in Concord, Massachusetts: Bronson Alcott, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, and Nathaniel Hawthorne. These men helped craft and define the course of true American literature through their essays, poetry, short stories, novels, nonfiction, conversations, lectures, and above all, journaling. Though no new material is presented here, Mr. Schreiner does a good job of tracing the four threads, merging them, and synthesizing basic facts with the subjects' own words. Along the way, the reader learns much about the town of Concord itself. Recommended reading for anyone who is looking for a casual yet fairly accurate introduction to the transcendentalists and to the Concord of the 1800s.

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Growing Up True: Lessons from a Western Boyhood Review

Growing Up True: Lessons from a Western Boyhood
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Craig Barnes has crafted a beautiful, evocative book. This vivid reminiscence of family life in the rural West explains--better than any general work I have read--the beliefs and values and personal strengths that enabled the so-called "greatest generation" to surmount the challenges presented by the Great Depression and the world's first global war. As a story of family life in America, GROWING UP TRUE is a boyhood classic which belongs on the special shelf that holds Russell Baker's book about GROWING UP in Baltimore.

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In Growing Up True, Craig Barnes shares his stories of growing up in rural Colorado during and after World War II. As the youngest of three boys, and an imaginative one at that, he dreamed of many a swashbuckling adventure far beyond Colorado's Highline Canal. But the lessons and demands of real life always nipped at the edges of his fantastic dreams. Barnes's mother told him that he would develop moral character if he would carry water to her maple saplings. His father held that a small person "... should learn to plan ahead, think a problem through, be lighthearted, cheerful, ready to help whenever needed. It would also be good to do the algebra homework, and geography, too, and it would be good to clean the barn ... ."

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The New Westminster Dictionary of Liturgy and Worship Review

The New Westminster Dictionary of Liturgy and Worship
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From preface: New Westminster Dictionary of Liturgy and Worship by Paul Bradshaw (Westminster John Knox Press) Although this dictionary is very obviously closely related to the Dictionary of Liturgy and Worship edited by J. G. Davies (SCM Press, London 1972, 2nd ed. 1986), it is not merely a further edition of that work, but rather its successor. While the vast majority of the headings used in that earlier volume have been adopted here, some have been deleted, new ones added, and other subjects rearranged. For example, `experimental forms of worship' has been eliminated because it now seems an outdated category, and for a similar reason `feminist liturgical movement' subsumed within the wider category of `women and worship'; while entries referring to more recent developments, like `praise and worship movement', have been inserted. The broad entry on `liturgies' has been replaced by two separate entries, on `eucharist' and on `word, services of the'. In some cases entries have been placed under new headings that would be more commonly used today. Thus, for instance, `year, liturgical' has been substituted for `calendar'; `daily prayer' for `canonical hours'; `eucharistic prayer' for `anaphora'; `inculturation' for `indigenization'; and so on.
All entries have been entirely rewritten, and in nearly every case by a new contributor. Contributors have been chosen on the basis of their expertise in the particular subject, in some instances from within the particular worship tradition under discussion, in others from outside, since both views shed valuable and complementary light. All the entries, except the shortest, have been broken up into numbered sections with sub-headings for ease of use and provided with bibliographical resources for further study. Where appropriate, the literature listed has been divided into selected texts and studies, with works containing a more extensive bibliography indicated by the symbol (bib.). It is the editor's earnest hope that with these changes and improvements the volume will serve as a comprehensive guide to the subject for future years as well as Davies' work has done for the last thirty years.

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Eerie Archives, Vol. 2 Review

Eerie Archives, Vol. 2
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It's eerie...but my copy of this book arrived with the cover embossment done upside down. Even so, the inside is intact and complete. I just flipped the dust cover and you can't tell the difference. I have purchased the first three of the Creepy Archives as well as Volume 1 of the Eerie Archives (all of which were printed upside right). As other reviewers have written, these volumes are very well done. The selling price at Amazon is very reasonable and one of the lowest to be found for brand new editions. The books are great fun, the quality of the printing is excellent, the covers of each issue are beautifully reproduced. For those of us who used to devour these magazines as kids, these books are a great return trip to those yesteryears.

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A Short History of the Honey Bee: Humans, Flowers, and Bees in the Eternal Chase for Honey Review

A Short History of the Honey Bee: Humans, Flowers, and Bees in the Eternal Chase for Honey
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Timber Press has published a wide variety of quality book on plants and related areas. This clearly is a related area. It is a book by someone who really loves bees, a compliment. It has wonderful photographs and a delightful flow of the story of the author's dealings with this creatures.
However, it is not strong on the scientific side, and is really a light hearted tale of the author and the honey bee. I had hoped that it would have been a bit stronger on the bee, the bee families, the details of some of the problems bees face today, and frankly something a bit more filled with content rather than experience.
The book is enjoyable but there was an ambiguity of expectations. I have seen this more and more with Timber in that they have wonderful picture books but lack the depth one would like in a more technical presentation.
All in all the author has done a good job at what was the initial intent.

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There are around 16,000 species of bee. Only seven of these are responsible for creating the world's sweetest treat -- honey. Combining Ilona's gorgeous photography and E. Readicker-Henderson's engaging text, A Short History of the Honey Bee follows the journey from flower to hive to honey throughout history.A Short History of the Honey Bee starts with the story of the honey bee -- why it is named Apis mellifera, how it has evolved from a solitary creature to one that travels in groups, why it stings, and how pollination really works. Readicker-Henderson then moves on to the honey, detailing its history from a wild food foraged for on cliffs to the many varieties available for purchase today. But it is the everyday importance of the bee that remains the central message. Forty percent of the world's food supply -- including apples, tomatoes, and strawberries -- is dependent on pollination by honeybees. Colony collapse, when the worker bees suddenly disappear and leave behind the queen and the hive, is an ecological and agricultural crisis. For this reason alone we need to be more aware of the significance of bees.

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