The Language of Bees explained

The Language of Bees
Author:Laurie R. King
Country:United States
Language:English
Series:Mary Russell
Genre:Detective fiction
Publisher:Bantam Books (US)
Allison & Busby (UK)
Release Date:2009
Media Type:Print (hardback)
Isbn:0-553-80454-5
Preceded By:Locked Rooms
Followed By:The God of the Hive

The Language of Bees is a 2009 mystery novel by American author Laurie R. King.[1] Ninth in King's Mary Russell series, the story features detectives Mary Russell and her husband Sherlock Holmes. The events of the novel follow soon after those found in King's preceding novel, Locked Rooms.

Plot summary

Russell and Holmes return to their home in Sussex, England, in 1924 after seven months abroad in India, Japan and California. The novel features a domestic mystery as a hive on Holmes's farm has been repeatedly swarming and a colony of bees is found to have disappeared. Action shifts, however, with the reappearance of Damian Adler, a talented young painter and emotionally disturbed veteran of World War I, first introduced in the second book in the series. Adler is Holmes' estranged son, born to Irene Adler in about 1895. The distraught Adler seeks the couple's help in locating his missing wife Yolanda and their daughter Estelle.

Russell and Holmes separate during the investigation and Russell searches out Damian's questionable past. The search involves the British practitioners of a religious cult called The Children of Lights with roots in Shanghai, China, and features locations ranging from Bohemian London to the wilds of Scotland. Russell experiences a harrowing trip by aeroplane. A series of bodies appears, some dead by suicide and others ritually sacrificed. While the climax of the novel, in an ancient circle of standing stones in Orkney, brings some plot resolution, the story continues in The God of the Hive (2010).

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 9 March 2009 . The Language of Bees: A Mary Russell Novel by Laurie R. King . 2024-02-19 . Publishers Weekly.