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The Hive (2013)

by Gill Hornby

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16113171,276 (2.98)5
It's the start of another school year at St. Ambrose. While the children are busy in the classroom, their mothers are learning sharper lessons. Lessons in friendship. Lessons in betrayal. Lessons in the laws of community, the transience of power and how to get invited to lunch. Beatrice, undisputed queen bee. Ruler, by Divine Right, of all school fundraising, this year, last year, and, surely, for many to come. Heather is desperate to volunteer, desperate to be noticed, desperate to belong. Georgie is desperate for a cigarette. Rachel is watching them all, keeping her distance. But soon to discover that the line between amused observer and miserable outcast is a thin one.… (more)
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Showing 1-5 of 12 (next | show all)
Actually I didn't finish it, I abandoned it. Perhaps I've left the school gate behind too long ago, but these mums didn't resemble any I knew. I found the book silly and pointless. ( )
  Margaret09 | Apr 15, 2024 |
A very British tale of what it's like to be on the inside or the outside of a cliquey group of mothers whose children attend St. Ambrose Primary school in one of the Home Counties not far from London. The leader of the Committee of St. Ambrose (COSTA) is Bea Stuart, a mean girl grown up but largely unchanged since her own school days, although she's now 40. Bea has her sycophants, notably the somewhat intelligence-challenged Heather, and others like Georgie who is so reluctant to get caught up in Bea's fund-raising schemes for the new school library that she's constantly going outside "for a fag", even though she only lights them, flicks off the ashes, stubs them out, but doesn't actually smoke them. Then there is Rachel, who was once Bea's best friend but is now cast out. Although I would run a mile if I had to actually deal with some of these women, I must admit they are fascinating to read about. The analogy of the beehives was adroitly woven into the story. My husband was British, so I wasn't put off by the British-isms that dot the text & might confuse some non-Anglos. Although I must admit I didn't get "lesbian" as a kind of herbal tea - what's that about? Enjoyable mothers-at-the-school-gate tale. ( )
  booksandscones | May 12, 2018 |
Oh my. I read this book with a wicked smile on my face just wishing I was a big enough bitch to send it to someone with a note 'you're Bea and I'm so over it'. I've decided to be the bigger person and just think it - lots!

An intelligent, funny and warm look at life from the school gates. Good fun. ( )
  boobellina | Jul 12, 2017 |
Oh my. I read this book with a wicked smile on my face just wishing I was a big enough bitch to send it to someone with a note 'you're Bea and I'm so over it'. I've decided to be the bigger person and just think it - lots!

An intelligent, funny and warm look at life from the school gates. Good fun. ( )
  boobellina | Jul 12, 2017 |
I just finished it and I'm still sitting here with a smile on my face. Although it took me a few chapters to actually get hooked into this book, it did happen. After that, I just enjoyed watching this odd but, unfortunately, extremely familiar collection of mostly women with small children react to each other within the very descriptive "hive" of an elementary school. Power struggles, money raising, pettiness, and on and on---very well expressed in this novel---full of the funny as well as fundamentally serious issues that arise in the effort to raise children presented as a school year going, up, down and sideways........ ( )
  nyiper | Aug 2, 2014 |
Showing 1-5 of 12 (next | show all)
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Una Apis, nulls Apis
One bee is no bee

(proverb)
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For Robert
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8.45 A.M. DROP-OFF

There was Bea, standing over the other side, in the shade of the big beech tree.
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It's the start of another school year at St. Ambrose. While the children are busy in the classroom, their mothers are learning sharper lessons. Lessons in friendship. Lessons in betrayal. Lessons in the laws of community, the transience of power and how to get invited to lunch. Beatrice, undisputed queen bee. Ruler, by Divine Right, of all school fundraising, this year, last year, and, surely, for many to come. Heather is desperate to volunteer, desperate to be noticed, desperate to belong. Georgie is desperate for a cigarette. Rachel is watching them all, keeping her distance. But soon to discover that the line between amused observer and miserable outcast is a thin one.

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