Selected Product: | A World Without Bees Hardcover Author: Alison Benjamin, Brian McCallum Publisher: Guardian Newspapers Ltd Release Date: June 2008 ISBN-10: 0852650922 ISBN-13: 9780852650929 List Price: £9.99 Average Customer Rating: | | Keeping Bees and Making Honey ISBN-10: 0715328107 Forgotten Fruits: A Guide to Britain's Traditional Fruit and Vegetables, from Orange Jelly Turnips to Dan's Mistake Gooseberries ISBN-10: 1905211805 Bee Keeping: Inspiration and Practical Advice for Would-be Smallholders (Country Living): Inspiration and Practical Advice for Would-be Smallholders (Country Living) ISBN-10: 1843404184 Bad Science ISBN-10: 0007240198 The Buzz About Bees: Biology of a Superorganism ISBN-10: 3540787275 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for A World Without Bees by Alison Benjamin, Brian McCallum (ISBN-10: 0852650922, ISBN-13: 9780852650929). At this time we have not yet written a review for A World Without Bees by Alison Benjamin, Brian McCallum (ISBN-10: 0852650922, ISBN-13: 9780852650929). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Timely, persuasive and necessary | Customer Rating: | | If climate change doesn't get you, the disappearance of the honeybee will - this is the rather gloomy message of Alison Benjamin and Brian McCallum's well researched and engagingly written new book on Colony Collapse Disorder - a honeybee `plague' which has already killed millions of bees worldwide. Some 90 commercial crops owe their continued existence to the pollination services provided free of charge by the honeybee so its fair to say that A World Without Bees is an important book. For it to succeed in its mission it has to put the fear of God into us without losing us to jargon. It does so admirably, taking us through the rather complicated but interesting world of honeybee health, politics and economics and delivering us to a conclusion which lays the blame firmly on our own shoulders. Time to start talking about bee rights? Could be. | Unique, valuable, objective; a fantastically GOOD book | Customer Rating: | I read this wonderful book in one very long sitting; I really could not stop once I started. Having grown up surrounded, in my immediate family, by the 1950's acute nature-awareness of the early Soil Association days of Bob Waller and Harold Horne et al, it was like deja vu to me. The authors have been very disciplined in producing a really worthwhile book; it is almost perfectly objective, and therefore above cheap criticism. They have worked immensely hard to source a huge amount of sound material, and they have taken the trouble to understand it thoroughly before using it in their book. And the mystery at issue is no less than how terrifyingly detached from truth we are becoming, and how little we now understand our own misery and poverty of life in the midst of all our illusion of ease; how deprived of reality we have already become. Read it! In the morning, the evening, on the train, in the bath, but read it. It is more real than most other stuff you will find on printed paper or glowing on a monitor any day of the year. |
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