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The Last Apiarist. An unforgettable, deeply moving literary novel about sibling estrangement, unspoken grief, inherited land, a burned legacy, a buried family secret, and the slow work of coming home
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- Nombre de pages229
- FormatePub
- ISBN8259600812
- EAN9798259600812
- Date de parution16/06/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Taille819 Ko
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurChiify
Résumé
By the time Ruth reached the apiary, three hives were already overturned and a fourth was still smoking.
The bees were her father's. And her grandfather's before that. And Esther's before that, back when the land was still called the Spring Farm and the honey tasted of clover and wild mint and something no one could ever replicate.
Now they are charcoal and ash.
Someone burned them on purpose.
And Ruth's brother Jasper already has a realtor standing in the ruins, tablet in hand, a woman in a blue blazer talking about topography and payouts while the embers are still warm.
"It's not a market signal, " Ruth tells him.
"Someone torched our hives. That's a crime." "It's an insurance claim, " Jasper says. He wants to file, collect, and sell the cleared hillside to the developers at a premium. He wants the last of their family's land turned into condos on ground that floods every spring. And he has not looked his sister in the eye since the day their father's will was read. "You left, " Jasper tells her.
"You don't get to swan in now and play the concerned daughter." Ruth did leave. She drove to Burlington and she stayed there, and Jasper has never forgiven the leaving. But these were her father's bees. And her grandfather's. And Esther's, on the Spring Farm, when the honey still tasted of something no one could name. As she sifts the wreckage of the only inheritance she ever wanted, Ruth begins to pull at a thread that runs back through generations of silence - a German's old letter, a hymnal's secret, a missing epilogue to a story she thought she knew. A secret the family carried instead of speaking, kept as carefully as a queen in a winter cluster. Someone wanted these hives gone badly enough to burn them. And the why goes deeper than any insurance claim. To save the hives, the land, and whatever is left between her and her brother, Ruth must decide what is worth fighting for - and what a family finally owes the truth it has refused to tell. The Last Apiarist is an unforgettable, deeply moving literary novel about sibling estrangement, unspoken grief, inherited land, a burned legacy, a buried family secret, and the slow work of coming home. Perfect for readers who love quiet literary fiction, rural family dramas, novels of estranged siblings and homecoming, Vermont and New England settings, and luminous stories about grief, land, and the secrets families keep.
"Someone torched our hives. That's a crime." "It's an insurance claim, " Jasper says. He wants to file, collect, and sell the cleared hillside to the developers at a premium. He wants the last of their family's land turned into condos on ground that floods every spring. And he has not looked his sister in the eye since the day their father's will was read. "You left, " Jasper tells her.
"You don't get to swan in now and play the concerned daughter." Ruth did leave. She drove to Burlington and she stayed there, and Jasper has never forgiven the leaving. But these were her father's bees. And her grandfather's. And Esther's, on the Spring Farm, when the honey still tasted of something no one could name. As she sifts the wreckage of the only inheritance she ever wanted, Ruth begins to pull at a thread that runs back through generations of silence - a German's old letter, a hymnal's secret, a missing epilogue to a story she thought she knew. A secret the family carried instead of speaking, kept as carefully as a queen in a winter cluster. Someone wanted these hives gone badly enough to burn them. And the why goes deeper than any insurance claim. To save the hives, the land, and whatever is left between her and her brother, Ruth must decide what is worth fighting for - and what a family finally owes the truth it has refused to tell. The Last Apiarist is an unforgettable, deeply moving literary novel about sibling estrangement, unspoken grief, inherited land, a burned legacy, a buried family secret, and the slow work of coming home. Perfect for readers who love quiet literary fiction, rural family dramas, novels of estranged siblings and homecoming, Vermont and New England settings, and luminous stories about grief, land, and the secrets families keep.





