Ned Kelly and the City of the Bees

by Thomas Keneally

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Book cover for Ned Kelly and the City of the Bees

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The summer Ned Kelly lived with the bees was extraordinary, to say the very least. It began as he lay in his hospital bed and looked up to see a lovely dark and gold creature on the window sill gazing at him with pitying eyes. Swallowing the drop of golden liquid Apis the Bee offered, Ned became just the right size to travel on her back if he held on tightly to her armour. Apis was a worker who took things easier than most, claiming that bees didn't know how to relax. She stopped off between chores to listen to the serials on the radio like 'The Search for the Golden Boomerand' (for this was Australia) and she had even taught Selma, the queen of her hive, to speak radio language, so Ned had no trouble understanding either of them. Ned was filled with wonder on entering the hive, which was like a huge apartment building and factory in one. Nancy Clancy, another human child of insect size, shared her room with Ned and, aside from her habit of speaking in rhyme - which she did to annoy Apis - she made a good companion.
They met Romeo the drone, a love-sick male bee who wanted nothing more than to be near Queen Selma and to tell her jokes, and Razzle-Dazzle Basil with his Power to the Drones campaign to protect male bees who were generally thrown out of the hive in autumn. They battled against a surprise attack of raiding wasps, rallied to Queen Selma when she was overthrown and, thanks to their tiny size, witnessed plenty of the village dramas - the plotting of a robbery, a proposal of marriage by Ned's doctor and the latest misdemeanours of the school bully.
  • ISBN10 038069848X
  • ISBN13 9780380698486
  • Publish Date 1 February 1985 (first published October 1978)
  • Publish Status Out of Print
  • Out of Print 3 March 2016
  • Publish Country US
  • Imprint Avon Books
  • Format Paperback (US Trade)
  • Pages 128
  • Language English