Bruno the bear keeps bees in this Czech import.
Holasová weaves Bruno’s activities with his bees in and around a bounty of information about honeybees and their keeping. Honey-and-sepia illustrations introduce worker, drone, and queen; their respective metamorphoses and anatomies; the structure of a managed beehive; and a beekeeper’s protective clothing (though however “spiffy Bruno looks” in it, he mostly relies on his thick pelt). The narrative then begins with Bruno’s late-fall activities: storing unnecessary hive parts for the winter, feeding the bees, and readying equipment for the spring. Spring brings blossoms, first inspections, and “supering up”—placing additional boxes for honey production on the hives; in summer comes the honey harvest. There is a surprising amount of technical information conveyed in this gentle book; children familiar with beekeeping will recognize the activities depicted, and explanations are both accurate and friendly to children who are not. There is humor in the near-constant cloud of bees around Bruno’s head as he works, and beauty as well in lovely botanical watercolors. The whimsical depiction of adult bee faces on eggs and developing larvae is both inaccurate and a little weird; the introduction of bee parasites with no mention of routine treatment and prevention is a gap. Though loosely arranged according to the calendar, it is essentially a nonlinear narrative, and readers can dip in and out, making it more the primer of the subtitle than a read-aloud.
Utterly bee-guiling.
(index) (Nonfiction. 7-10)