Summer of the Glass Bees: A Novel
Uitgelicht
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9,24 |
Naar shop
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9,24 |
Naar shop
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10,50 |
Naar shop
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Beschrijving
Bol
The bees arrive early. The records grow clean. The town becomes quiet in the wrong way.Every summer in Millfield, the glass bees return.They settle on gardens and gravestones. They hover at windows. They leave no sting-only relief. Grief softens. Anger thins. Old injuries fade into manageable recollection. The town breathes easier.Eliza Ward keeps the Municipal Archive. She catalogs births and deaths, property lines and ordinance files, the small frictions that give a place its shape. She knows how much pressure a name can leave in paper. She knows which entries were written in a shaking hand. She believes that memory lives not just in words, but in the weight behind them.As the bees multiply, Millfield begins to change. Headstones are standardized. Intake forms are simplified. Old photographs lose their shadows. The town's history is digitized, streamlined, clarified. The shelves empty. The air grows light.It feels better.When Eliza tries to preserve what remains-an old ledger, a missing child's name, a record that resists correction-she discovers that memory can be archived without being kept. The data survives. The texture does not.Beautiful, restrained, and quietly devastating, The Summer of the Glass Bees is a literary horror novella about grief, efficiency, and what we surrender when we choose clarity over friction.For readers of atmospheric fiction and slow-burn dread, this is a story about a town that becomes perfect-and the cost of letting it.
The bees arrive early. The records grow clean. The town becomes quiet in the wrong way.Every summer in Millfield, the glass bees return.They settle on gardens and gravestones. They hover at windows. They leave no sting-only relief. Grief softens. Anger thins. Old injuries fade into manageable recollection. The town breathes easier.Eliza Ward keeps the Municipal Archive. She catalogs births and deaths, property lines and ordinance files, the small frictions that give a place its shape. She knows how much pressure a name can leave in paper. She knows which entries were written in a shaking hand. She believes that memory lives not just in words, but in the weight behind them.As the bees multiply, Millfield begins to change. Headstones are standardized. Intake forms are simplified. Old photographs lose their shadows. The town's history is digitized, streamlined, clarified. The shelves empty. The air grows light.It feels better.When Eliza tries to preserve what remains-an old ledger, a missing child's name, a record that resists correction-she discovers that memory can be archived without being kept. The data survives. The texture does not.Beautiful, restrained, and quietly devastating, The Summer of the Glass Bees is a literary horror novella about grief, efficiency, and what we surrender when we choose clarity over friction.For readers of atmospheric fiction and slow-burn dread, this is a story about a town that becomes perfect-and the cost of letting it.
AmazonPagina's: 120, Paperback, Independently published
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