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    Bee Time: Lessons from the Hive

    by Mark L. Winston


    Paperback

    (Reprint)

    $18.95
    $18.95

    Temporarily Out of Stock Online

    Customer Reviews

    • ISBN-13: 9780674970854
    • Publisher: Harvard
    • Publication date: 09/05/2016
    • Edition description: Reprint
    • Pages: 296
    • Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.25(h) x (d)

    Mark L. Winston is Professor and Senior Fellow at Simon Fraser University’s Centre for Dialogue and Professor in the Department of Biological Sciences.

    Table of Contents

    Prologue: Walking into the Apiary 1

    1 Beginning with Bees 5

    2 Honey 18

    3 Killer Bees 40

    4 A Thousand Little Cuts 57

    5 Valuing Nature 83

    6 Bees in the City 111

    7 There's Something Bigger than Phil 133

    8 Art and Culture 154

    9 Being Social 174

    10 Conversing 199

    11 Lessons from the Hive 221

    Epilogue: Walking out of the Apiary 239

    References 247

    Acknowledgments 263

    Index 267

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    Being among bees is a full-body experience, Mark Winston writes—from the low hum of tens of thousands of insects and the pungent smell of honey and beeswax, to the sight of workers flying back and forth between flowers and the hive. The experience of an apiary slows our sense of time, heightens our awareness, and inspires awe. Bee Time presents Winston’s reflections on three decades spent studying these creatures, and on the lessons they can teach about how humans might better interact with one another and the natural world.

    Like us, honeybees represent a pinnacle of animal sociality. How they submerge individual needs into the colony collective provides a lens through which to ponder human societies. Winston explains how bees process information, structure work, and communicate, and examines how corporate boardrooms are using bee societies as a model to improve collaboration. He investigates how bees have altered our understanding of agricultural ecosystems and how urban planners are looking to bees in designing more nature-friendly cities.

    The relationship between bees and people has not always been benign. Bee populations are diminishing due to human impact, and we cannot afford to ignore what the demise of bees tells us about our own tenuous affiliation with nature. Toxic interactions between pesticides and bee diseases have been particularly harmful, foreshadowing similar effects of pesticides on human health. There is much to learn from bees in how they respond to these challenges. In sustaining their societies, bees teach us ways to sustain our own.

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    Thomas D. Seeley
    No other book celebrates the long relationship between humans and honeybees as powerfully, thoughtfully, and enchantingly as this one. Written in lyrical prose, Bee Time is a delightful and inspiring read.
    The Guardian - P. D. Smith
    Mark Winston has spent 30 years studying and working with bees. His book is a passionate celebration of bees, apiaries and honey, as well as a calmly reasoned critique of industrialized farming and a plea to halt the dramatic decline in bee numbers…A wonderfully rich insight into the imperiled world of the bee.
    Gene E. Robinson
    Bee Time is a unique book: in turn a touching memoir, a warm paean to the honey bees that have fueled Winston’s impressive scientific career, and an insightful analysis of some of the serious environmental problems facing us today.
    Weekly Standard - Temma Ehrenfeld
    [Winston’s] lyricism inspires awe of these necessary insects.
    Nature - Barbara Kiser
    In this personal and scientific journey into the history we share with bees, [Winston] ranges over neonicotinoid pesticides and colony collapse, the control of African ‘killer’ bees and more. The charismatic social insects emerge as both icons of societal cohesion and symbols of nature’s paradoxically mingled power and fragility.
    New Scientist - Adrian Barnett
    [Winston] writes lovingly of the rhythms and quiddities of the apiary… In a highly personal style, Winston steps between reportage, scientific exactitude and a deep, poetically expressed love of bees, beekeeping and the cultural forms that bees inspire. People and bees have been working together for millennia—synergy that Winston, sensitized by his work as a communications specialist, clearly feels brings out the best and the worst in humanity. His take on the situation makes Bee Time an insightful delight.
    Bee Culture - Kim Flottum
    A recap of what’s been going on in beekeeping over the past 10 years or so…Winston has left no hive unturned in this work, documenting all the good, and the bad that has occurred…There are indeed lessons to learn from a bee hive. This work will share some of them with you.
    Toronto Star - Sarah Murdoch
    Thoughtful and eloquent…Winston is an inspired cross-pollinator, who uses the ‘full-body experience’ of being with bees to draw lessons for human hives.
    Open Letters Monthly - Steve Donoghue
    Winston wants to acquaint his readers with the fascinating complexity of the bee world, and he also wants to alert readers to the fact that the bee world is drastically endangered. He brings to this hybrid task a very smooth ability to simplify the complex bee-literature he’s obviously mastered, providing engaging glimpses into the world of the hive—and usually presenting them in parallel context of the human world… Considering the enormous ripple-effects that would happen in the wake of the disappearance of these key pollinators, Winston’s wake-up call takes on an urgency that’s belied by its friendly, approachable tone. That clarion call makes Bee Time an important book, even if you by chance suffer from a touch of apiphobia.
    Literary Review - Kristin Treen
    [Winston] presents a stark picture of how much we expect from, and rely on, bees.
    Choice - J. M. Gonzalez
    Winston combines beekeeping work/research, philosophical musings, and his personal memories in this enjoyable book.
    Vancouver Sun - Jeff Lee
    Like the beekeeper he is, paying careful attention to what’s going on in his colonies, Winston has done a fine job with this book. Bee Time is beautifully written and rich in the detail, evoking emotions without being overly maudlin.
    Library Journal
    09/01/2014
    What can we learn from bees and beekeepers? Bees, explains Winston (academic director, Ctr. for Dialogue, Simon Fraser Univ.) tell engaging stories. Beekeepers show gratitude with honey. Patient scientists uncover the secrets of bee pheromones. The hive's communication inspires deliberative democracy. Colony collapse disorder heralds the end of "industrial agriculture," and worker bees exemplify communitarianism. Sadly, Winston chooses facts and inflates numbers' significance to squeeze bees into his ideology. He claims the dialog and deliberative democracy movements are "exploding" with tens to hundreds of thousands of members; since the adult population of the United States is 242 million, this is hardly an explosion. The author also fails to mention that workers sometimes kill a failing queen, a newly emerged queen slays her rivals, and workers expel drones to die. Winston's chapter on colony collapse disorder says nothing about efforts to improve colony survival by breeding mite-resistant strains or feeding overwintering hives pollen substitutes, and he is silent about sustainable farming's possible effect on food prices. VERDICT For discovering the quirky personalities behind bees, this book is enjoyable. For learning about and appreciating bees, Rowan Jacobsen's Fruitless Fall and Chris O'Toole's Bees: A Natural History are better choices.—Eileen H. Kramer, Georgia Perimeter Coll. Lib., Clarkston

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