A Hand Maid’s Tale meets How I Live Now in this page-turning dystopian YA which the author has described as a ‘love letter to her daughter’. In a world where bees are at risk of extinction, one girl fights for her own survival.Imagine a world where honeybees have died out. It’s a patriarchal world where famines are rife. It’s a world without art, without books, without plays.Girls are sent away from home, forced to pollinate crops by hand with brushes and to marry as soon as they can.Inhabiting this world is Jess and her friends Cass, Deva, and Ruth.But even if one fourteen-year-old knows that the system is dangerous, can she really stoke a revolution?Incredible new voice in YA literature from a recognisable Welsh adult authorSrong environmental message – it has been predicted that if honeybees were to become extinct, man would have only four years to live.Hand pollination is already practised in China as an estimated 80% of China’s native wild honeybee population has already been lost). Empowering female friendships ?Caryl Lewis said: ‘As a beekeeper, I am acutely aware of the interconnectedness of everything and have long been frightened of how we, as humans, set ourselves apart from nature.We do not seem to understand that in destroying nature, we destroy ourselves.My daughter is growing up in what feels like a much more hostile environment facing climate instability, the rise of misogyny and the roll back of women’s bodily rights.I wanted to comfort and empower her and let her see that our greatest weapon in a floundering world is the imagination.'