The Hive: a world- decades, maybe centuries, from now. Climate disaster has wrought havoc on the lands; most of the population has died; of those who have survived, most are infertile. The ability to procreate has led to a new elite surfacing, with the power to cull the population in violent displays known as Winnowings…
Fans of Laline Paulls’ ‘The Bees’ will be familiar with the tight, cellular set-up of a beehive; the ruthless order, which prioritises the survival of the colony over individual needs. All of which have been used by Anna February to create a claustrophobic and tense atmosphere for her YA murder mystery.
I really enjoyed the discomfiting setting of this book. It’s interesting to imagine a new world built from scratch in the future, mimicking our pre-industrial past, as innovation had become our species’ greatest enemy. This is a neo-medieval society, complete with a feudal-type arrangement: carders, cutters, handmaidens, couriers serving the ascendants, protected by a knightly class of Shields, with whom they are unbreakably bonded from birth. These ascendants, all have the potential to accede to power if they impress and of course, if they survive. And at the top of the pile? The Apex- a group of seven royal-born individuals, who have proven they have what it takes to rule the Hive for the greater good and to keep the bloodline going.
When Euphemie, an ascendant-on-the-rise is murdered, the Hive is unsettled but not for long; her shield, Feldspar is arrested for the murder and the case seems closed. Until the second murder, that is…
Feldspar is a great lead- as someone who had previously bought into the rhetoric and traditions of the Hive, her precarious situation throws everything open and we watch her world unravel in real time. Incidentally, ‘Feldspar’ would immediately enter my Top 10 list of character names …if I had one. Anyway, Feldspar’s only hope is to solve the crime of which she is being accused and possibly prevent further murders in the process. With only one ally, Nikolos -the Sixth, himself an outsider, the task is a mighty one.
With the absence of a hive mind, it took me a little while to navigate all of the detail of the world (it is very intricate, as is the plot). That said, I really enjoyed the discovery and I felt I really understood the world and character motivations in time for the most gripping parts of the investigation to come to the fore. The last third is full of exciting twists and really had me guessing.
Interesting, intimate and intricate. A recommended read. 13+
4.5 🌟