A little boy who enjoys observing honeybees has a magical adventure with them.
The narrator, a pale-skinned tot with close-cropped black hair, sits on an overturned flowerpot, gazing at the bees flying in and out of a bright blue hive. Inexplicably but delightfully, two bees have brought him an itty-bitty bee suit that shrinks him to “the size of a teeny-weeny honeybee.” Bella and Beatrice usher him past the guards and into the hive, which is dark but “smell[s] LOVELY.” Scaling the comb, he observes workers feeding beatifically smiling larvae, meets the Queen, and witnesses the waggle dance that, Bella informs him, “shows us where to find flowers.” Following a brief flight—his suit is equipped with tiny wings—he helps his friends gather strawberry nectar and dandelion pollen. Taking the suit off restores him to his full size, and the next day he thoughtfully “plant[s] lots of seeds and flowers” for his new friends. Readers accustomed to Voake’s flowing ink-and-wash paintings will note a departure here; these illustrations are constructed out of cut paper embellished with her familiar brushy lines. The focus is on whimsy rather than verisimilitude—these bees have just four legs, for instance—but this is a fantasy, after all. (This book was reviewed digitally.)
A cozy, nonthreatening preschoolers’ introduction to some honeybee basics.
(Picture book. 3-5)