Author:Steve Benbow
At a time when the UK bee population is in decline there's no better way to make a difference than to start up your own beehive.
Steve Benbow's enormous success with urban beekeeping show's how easy it is to keep bees, whether you're in the city or in the countryside, a beginner or an experienced beekeeper, and you'll never look back once you've tasted your very own sticky, golden honey, or lit a candle made from the beeswax from your beehive.
Steve Benbow is a visionary beekeeper who started his first beehive ten years ago on the roof of his tower block in Bermondsey and today runs 30 sites across the city. His bees live atop the Tate Modern and Tate Britain, Fortnum & Mason and the National Portrait Gallery, and he supplies honey to the Savoy tearooms, Harvey Nichols, Harrods and delis across London. His bees forage in parks, cemeteries, along railway lines and in window boxes, and because of the diversity of the plants and trees in the city, produce far richer honey and greater yields than they would in rural areas.
The Urban Beekeeper is afact-filled diary and practical guide to beekeeping that follows a year in the life of Steve and his bees and shows how keeping bees and making your own delicious honey is something anyone can do. It is a tempting glimpse into a sunlit lifestyle that starts with the first rays of the morning and ends with the warm glow of sunset, filled with oozing honeycomb, recipes for sensational honey-based dishes, and honey that tastes like sunshine.
A hugely affectionate but practical diary of a beekeeper's year and the immense satisfaction of harvesting your own delicious honey. Read it and join the revolution.
Steve is a living example of having a dream and living it. His tenacity in developing his urban beekeeping project matches that of the buzzing insects he adores. Be warned his enthusiasm is highly infectious and sure to bring out your inner beekeeper!
—— Keith AbelA charming and practical record of Steve Benbow’s life with bees. For me, a novice bee keeper, it is not only a great insight into the world of bees but is also full of practical, useful information
—— Jekka McVicarAn informative and often touching book… Enthralling
—— Mark Mason , SpectatorAn affectionate insight into the life of a London beekeeper
—— Countryfile MagazineHeartfelt, honest, practical and inspirational
—— Image Interiors & LivingThe diary of a typical year keeping bees in an urban environment, plus advice for budding city beekeepers, from the man who brought bees to the Tate Modern
—— The CountrymanThis has got to be the wine reference book to top all such guides
—— S Irene Virbila , Los Angeles TimesDefinitely the WINE BOOK of the decade, if not the century!
—— Wine Appreciation Guild, San FranciscoEven for the already knowledgeable and deeply well versed, the book offers countless new discoveries, surprises about grapes' true origins and kinships, and a plethora of varieties you've never even heard of
—— Michel Jamais , LivetsGoda.seIt is almost bible-like, which is perhaps quite fitting. I found the overall appearance quite beautiful. I was especially pleased to see many varieties have a description of the taste of their wines. From a drinker's perspective this must be the most important information
—— Steve Slatcher , Winenous.co.ukWine Grapes sets a new standard; it is a seminal new work
—— Joelle Thomson , Dominion Post and Christchurch PressOenophiles, you have here the ideal book to give others (and yourself!) this Christmas
—— Victor Franco , Polakia.comEvery wine lover MUST have this on their shelves
—— René Langdahl Jørgensen , Gastro.dkAmazingly informative and insightful ... Wine Grapes is an essential reference that belongs on every wine lover's bookshelf, right up there next to The World Atlas of Wine. One of the biggest pleasures of wine is its diversity. Wine Grapes will inspire you to stick your nose and tongue into new aromas and flavors
—— Elin McCoy , Business Week/Bloomberg.comThere have been books on grapes before, but we were badly in need of a bang up-to-date properly researched book, and we indeed have it in the new Wine Grapes. To me it is already indispensable ... I can already see that this big fat book is a fabulous resource and essential for all serious wine lovers to own
—— Wink Lorch , Winetravelmedia.comWine Grapes is an invaluable resource destined to find a fascinated, albeit niche, audience
—— Anthony Rose , anthonyrosewine.comWhat seemed at first like a prim reference tome to crack when I needed to sort out the 13 different varieties of Lambrusco has a more compelling mystery underneath ... The thoroughness (Listán Negro and Listán Prieto? Not the same thing, Canary Island fans) is matched by a sense of purpose, mostly because equal space is devoted to the esoteric (Grillo, Menu Pineau, Parellada) as to the obvious ... Along the way, it nullifies most simple homilies that litter the world of wine, instead offering a more complicated and interesting tale, one that reinforces wine as one of history's great culturing forces
—— Jon Bonné , San Francisco ChronicleIt is very rare for me to buy a wine book but I had no hesitation in buying it from Amazon for £78, and cheap for this amount of scholarship and research
—— Jim Budd, editor , Circle [of Wine Writers] UpdateThe ultimate reference work on wine grapes
—— LeVinPerdu.beI am impressed by the depth of scientifically justified and clearly formulated answers to a wide range of origin-related questions ... Wine Grapes gains an extra dimension for its attention to the diversity of grape-names ... With this book Jancis Robinson and her team have not only enriched our genetic knowledge of grape varieties, but also made it accessible to all wine enthusiasts who would like to know more about their names, ancestors and characteristics ... The most important wine book since The Oxford Companion to Wine has arrived, and with it Jancis Robinson has universally established her name as wine educator
—— John Bindels , Wijnwijs.euIt will undoubtedly race to its place ahead of the few other 'must stock' books in any serious winey-person's library ... the book genuinely breaks new ground, which is (a) quite rare for wine books, and (b) always a joy to fact-nerds like myself. Its main premise is to genetically trace the origins and ancestors of these grape varieties, and there are some surprises here
—— Sally Easton MW , Winewisdom.comThe most important wine book in years ... I am presented with a tome that will garner my attention for the rest of my life, make me smarter and give me pause to reconsider every time I imagine I might have done something of significance ... this book could easily pass for any writer's proudest moment, the culmination of a life's work
—— Tom Wark , FermentationWine Grapes - the new book from the @JancisRobinson team - incredible! Staggered by the detail. Seminal work, am speechless, thank you
—— Ronan Sayburn MSIn 'Abbuoto to Zweigelt' describes the book as one 'that I think any wine-lover would want to own'
—— Fiona Beckett , GuardianAn extraordinary new book ... an impressive new encyclopedic doorstop
—— Eric Asimov , New York TimesSome things you know you just have to have ... What a book!
—— Actor Sam Neill @ TwoPaddocks[the] book is for me a sine qua Doon
—— Randall Grahm , Bonny Doon VinyardThe most important event of the century so far... In its way this book is the equivalent to Diderot's Encyclopedie, Johnson's Dictionary or Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians.
—— Robert Slotover , Slotovino...a beautiful object and a work of scholarship... an essential Christmas present for wine lovers
—— Henry Jeffreys , The LadyThe grape book to end all grape books
—— Joanna Simon , House & GardenThe only important new standard work of recent times; revolutionary!
—— Stuart PigottDespite its density, a page-turner... An epic book
—— Talia Baiocchi , Eater.comIn short, if you are only going to have one wine grape book, then this is it
—— Mark Greenaway , Vinodiversity.comSetting aside the book's beauty and reference value, there's a lot of good reading here... Wine Grapes is awesome, a reference that anyone interested in wine, botany, culture and history should have on hand
—— Tara Q. Thomas , Wine & Spirits: BEST BOOK OF 2012According to Wine Grapes, the Pinot family, Noir, Meunier, Gris and Blanc, are genetically identical. In fact more than one type of Pinot has been found in the same vine. It's one of the things I love most about wine is that just when you think you've grasped something, it slips out of your grasp. Buy this amazing work of scholarship and you'll realise quite how little you know.
—— Henry Jeffreys , Henry’s World of BoozeThe most complete guide ever to grapes, vines and the bottles they produce. A wine buff's bible
—— Sunday Telegraph, Stella magazineA masterly work ... not only timely, but overdue ... a must-have
—— Eric Asimov , New York TimesGraced with lavish color plates depicting dozens of important grape varieties, this trusty encyclopedia will inspire novel wine match-ups for favorite recipes and settle wine trivia debates around the dinner table. History buffs, like your reviewer, will absolutely love how the book examines the earliest written references to their favorite grapes; for example we learn that Cabernet grapes trace back to ancient Basque varieties in northeast Spain; who knew!
—— David Lincoln Ross , SaveurFor anyone serious about wine, this is an endlessly fascinating volume - and a beautifully designed one too
—— Andrew Neather , Evening StandardThe most magnum of magna opera ... with the authoritative text and lovely illustrations reminiscent of a great, scholarly botanical book of the 19th century with its full colour plates ... a timeless classic
—— Wine-Pages.comBest Wine, Beer and Spirits Book and winner of the Jane Grigson award
—— IACP (International Association of Culinary Professionals) Awards 2014A wine book of the year, 2013
—— The TimesFaiveley International Wine Book of the Year 2013
—— Roederer AwardsBest Viticulture Book 2013
—— OIV AwardsBest Drink Book 2012
—— Fortnum & Mason Food and Drink AwardsBest Beverage Book 2012
—— James Beard AwardsHall of Fame for Best Wine Book 2012
—— Gourmand World Cookbook AwardsBest Drinks Book 2012
—— Wine & Spirits magazineDelves deeply into the magic and beauty of flight. An elegant writer with a sharp eye and a literary mind, Vanhoenacker… Writes about flight on an emotional and spiritual level, how it makes him feel to soar above the Earth while watching the landscape pass below.
—— Kent German , CNETHe spins a curious and articulate exploration of flying.
—— GuardianVanhoenacker’s calm and scrupulously composed prose style is soothing… Vanhoenacker manages to make flying seem exciting again.
—— Alexander Larman , ObserverA beautiful, contemplative book… What Skyfaring gives is something we need: elevation; another perspective… Normally when I find a volume where prose style and subject matter fuse so pleasingly, I tear through it in a day. Here, I found myself pausing on almost every page, as I absorbed its detail or phrasing.
—— Nicholas Lezard , GuardianHere is the simple wonder that remains at the heart of an experience which modern travellers all too easily take for granted.
—— IA writer of exquisite prose, fascinated both by the technical and mystical aspects of flight... In every line of this lovely book, there is something beautiful and strange.
—— Jane Shilling , Daily MailThis is the best book I've ever read on the subject... It's one of the best travel books I've ever read... Superb.
—— William Leith , Evening StandardAn unexpectedly lyrical memoir on a fascinating subject… Skyfaring will give you a delightfully fresh perspective on the wonder that is air travel.
—— Kate Slotover , RiddleIt’s calm, poetic and riveting… Fascinating.
—— National Geographic TravellerHe writes beautifully about the strange, alien world of high-altitude passenger flights… Vanhoenacker loves flying and communicates beautifully its marvels and mysteries.
—— Peter McKay , Daily Mail, Book of the YearI loved this fabulous insight into the secret world of the sky.
—— Melanie Reid , The Times, Book of the YearA brilliant, chunky, study of genes.
—— William Leith , Evening StandardThis book captures the progression from that intuitive sense of genetics to its birth as a veritable science and, for better or for worse, its evolution into a powerful tool… The book ends not with a conclusion, but with a feeling of anticipation… In many ways, The Gene is a call for caution and for a thoughtful consideration of the possibilities that progress may bring… When genes become tools, what will those tools be used for? As we try to answer that question, Mukherjee’s book asks us to carefully look back before we continue to move forward
—— Claire McDaniel & Daniel Marchalik , British Medical JournalA comprehensive – and gripping – history of the gene
—— Emma Finamore , Memo