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A review by bookwyrm_lark
The Beekeeper's Ball by Susan Wiggs
4.0
Review originally published at The Bookwyrm's Hoard.
I loved The Beekeeper's Ball. From its unique first encounter between the hero and heroine in the first pages, to its lovely and satisfying ending (which nonetheless manages to leave some threads unresolved), it's a wonderful and often moving book.
Like The Apple Orchard, the first book in the series, The Beekeeper's Ball moves between present-day events at and around Bella Vista, the Johansen estate and apple orchard, and the adolescent experiences of Magnus Johansen, his deceased wife Eva, and their Resistance friend Annelise in Nazi-occupied Denmark. The older segments, told both in dialog and in flashback, enrich the novel in several ways. They give depth and background to help the main character Isabel and her half-sister Tess understand their grandparents and the complex relationships in their own family. They also explore themes of courage and fear, suffering and emotional strength which find echos in several of the present-day characters.
Wiggs's writing is rich and sensual in the best meaning of the term. Her vivid descriptions of food, of scents and flavors, of sunshine and breezes and the hum of bees, make Bella Vista a living, vibrant place, and one I would dearly love to visit. But it's in her deep understanding of the human spirit that Wiggs really soars. From Magnus and Annelise to Isabel and Cormac, Wiggs's characters are completely authentic in their strengths, their flaws, their myriad emotions. Through her writing we get to know them as well as we might anyone in our own family... though one of the book's themes is that even our nearest and dearest may have secrets. We rarely know anyone well as we think we do - even ourselves.
The Beekeeper's Ball is a romance, yes -- or rather, there is a romance in it, between the home-loving Isabel and Cormac the wanderer. And it's a delightful romance, sometimes humorous, sometimes reluctant, often unpredictable, and totally irresistible. But like The Apple Orchard before it, The Beekeeper's Ball is so much more: it's a family saga, an exploration of the human spirit, even a hint of a mystery. (The story arc which stretches over the whole series involves three generations and events with their roots in Magnus, Eva, and Annalise's pasts. And the death of Isabel and Tess's father is murkier than it appears on the surface; it will probably be explored in a future book.)
I think you could probably read The Beekeeper's Ball without reading The Apple Orchard first, but why on earth would you? The war-time sections in particular will be easier to understand and follow if you've read the first book, and both books are definitely worth your time!
FTC disclosure: I received a review copy from the publisher through NetGalley. All opinions are entirely my own.
I loved The Beekeeper's Ball. From its unique first encounter between the hero and heroine in the first pages, to its lovely and satisfying ending (which nonetheless manages to leave some threads unresolved), it's a wonderful and often moving book.
Like The Apple Orchard, the first book in the series, The Beekeeper's Ball moves between present-day events at and around Bella Vista, the Johansen estate and apple orchard, and the adolescent experiences of Magnus Johansen, his deceased wife Eva, and their Resistance friend Annelise in Nazi-occupied Denmark. The older segments, told both in dialog and in flashback, enrich the novel in several ways. They give depth and background to help the main character Isabel and her half-sister Tess understand their grandparents and the complex relationships in their own family. They also explore themes of courage and fear, suffering and emotional strength which find echos in several of the present-day characters.
Wiggs's writing is rich and sensual in the best meaning of the term. Her vivid descriptions of food, of scents and flavors, of sunshine and breezes and the hum of bees, make Bella Vista a living, vibrant place, and one I would dearly love to visit. But it's in her deep understanding of the human spirit that Wiggs really soars. From Magnus and Annelise to Isabel and Cormac, Wiggs's characters are completely authentic in their strengths, their flaws, their myriad emotions. Through her writing we get to know them as well as we might anyone in our own family... though one of the book's themes is that even our nearest and dearest may have secrets. We rarely know anyone well as we think we do - even ourselves.
The Beekeeper's Ball is a romance, yes -- or rather, there is a romance in it, between the home-loving Isabel and Cormac the wanderer. And it's a delightful romance, sometimes humorous, sometimes reluctant, often unpredictable, and totally irresistible. But like The Apple Orchard before it, The Beekeeper's Ball is so much more: it's a family saga, an exploration of the human spirit, even a hint of a mystery. (The story arc which stretches over the whole series involves three generations and events with their roots in Magnus, Eva, and Annalise's pasts. And the death of Isabel and Tess's father is murkier than it appears on the surface; it will probably be explored in a future book.)
I think you could probably read The Beekeeper's Ball without reading The Apple Orchard first, but why on earth would you? The war-time sections in particular will be easier to understand and follow if you've read the first book, and both books are definitely worth your time!
FTC disclosure: I received a review copy from the publisher through NetGalley. All opinions are entirely my own.