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Book Bag: Meet Angelina, get a bee’s-eye view of honey, and discover the meaning of honor E-mail

book_honey_trail.jpgReviews by Sharon L. Shervington

The Honey Trail: In Pursuit of Liquid Gold and Vanishing Bees
Written by Grace Pundyk

Prized for its symphony of flavors and textures, and for its medicinal properties, honey commands both money and passion around the globe. So very enchanted by this commodity is Ms. Pundyk that she has spent many months, if not years, visiting countries from New Zealand and Australia to China (the world’s largest producer), Yemen, the United States, Turkey, the U.K. and other distinctive producers of this liquid gold. And far from being all sweetness and honey-colored light, the author faced down sometimes dire travel conditions, especially in the Middle East, as well as eagle-eyed customs inspectors who were sometimes willing and able to confiscate her hard-won treasure.

Though she does not appear to be wealthy, on several occasions, she informs us, she has spent over $150 on a jar of honey.

Here we meet mom-and pop beekeepers, as well as giants of the industry, and others who raise only queens. At length, the book describes just how critical bees are as an integral factor in the production of crops and the subsequent threat posed by Colony Collapse Disorder. She particularly cites the almond crop’s reliance on bees in the United States as an example. The disappearance of bees and colonies has been linked to both pests and pesticides, and even tied directly to chemical manufacturers.

This book is also a crash course in honey politics, notably on antidumping tariffs on Chinese honey (in the wake of a contamination scandal) here in the U.S. Hard to categorize, this book is part travelogue, part science, and very — perhaps a bit too — personal.

The Honey Trail: In Pursuit of Liquid Gold and Vanishing Bees, by Grace Pundyk; St. Martin’s Press; $27.99; 337 pages

book_honor_code.jpgThe Honor Code: How Moral Revolutions Happen
Written by Kwame Anthony Appiah

Most of us do not necessarily think of life’s practicalities when we think about philosophy. And yet that is exactly what Mr. Appiah, the internationally known philosopher, attempts in this gripping and highly readable volume.

He manages to bring an immediacy and relevance to philosophy that just might help change the world by making us think more deeply about the meaning of honor. He does this by looking at three practices and, in each case, its surprisingly swift demise.

In the cases of dueling among the aristocracy in Britain, foot-binding in China (in which upper-class girls were mutilated as toddlers and young children for a thousand years), and the abolition of slavery throughout the British Empire, he argues that it was much more than the conviction that these acts were morally wrong, that the honor of individuals combined with the honor of nations and thus led to massive action that finally eradicated these evils.

Finally, Mr. Appiah talks about so-called honor killing of women and girls by their own families throughout the Middle East and Pakistan. His account of this atrocity, which sadly has made its way to our shores, is alone worth the price of the book.

The Honor Code: How Moral Revolutions Happen, by Kwame Anthony Appiah; Norton; $25.95; 264 pages

book_angelina.jpgAngelina; an Unauthorized Biography
Written by Andrew Morton

Like an occasional candy fix, celebrity journalism, to my mind, is palatable only in small doses. And I confess that I am fascinated by Angelina Jolie. Not only do I find her a riveting and highly original actress, but she exhibits an air of mystery and danger that today’s stars generally lack. I also enjoyed, years ago, Mr. Morton’s Diana: Her True Story.

In Angelina, we meet the actress as a love-starved child of a charismatic actor father and desperately needy mother (Marcia Lynne became Marcheline) who chose to live largely through her daughter. Her efforts to facilitate a marriage between her daughter and Mick Jagger give new meaning to the stage-mother persona. At the same time she struggled with her father, Jon Voigt, who left the family when she was small, though he still remained a strong father figure.

Ultimately, though, amid the background of marriages, relationships and the crazy reality of Hollywood, this is a story of hard-won redemption and the transformation of a lonely child becoming her own woman as an artist, philanthropist, and mother.

Angelina; an Unauthorized Biography, written by Andrew Morton; St. Martin’s Press; $26.99; 328 pages

book_honey_bees.jpgHoney Bees: Letters From the Hive, a History of Bees and Honey
Written by Stephen Buchmann

Mr. Buchmann, a beekeeper and associate professor of entomology at the University of Arizona has written an altogether accessible and fascinating book about bees and honey from antiquity to the present. Medicinal uses for honey were written about since about 200 B.C., but unfortunately during the Dark and Middle Ages this knowledge appears to have been forgotten. Now, the antibacterial properties of honey and its efficacy in healing especially difficult wounds are being rediscovered — to the point that honey-impregnated dressings are now used frequently in countries such as Australia and the Netherlands.

This is a light-hearted yet deeply informative bee’s-eye view of their anatomy, lifestyles, diet, depictions in art and myth, and much, much more. It is filled with practical knowledge for the novice, or even the more advanced honey lover. There are recipes, a list of mail-order specialty honey purveyors, and even sources for honey processing and bee-keeping equipment. Oh yes: what should you do when a bee wants to make your acquaintance? Hint: Don’t start waving your arms.

Honey Bees: Letters From the Hive, a History of Bees and Honey, written by Stephen Buchmann; Delacorte Press; $16.99; 212 pages

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