Review: Little Bee by Chris Cleave
I came into Little Bee knowing precious few things about the author or the story. It was recommended to me as a “You Might Also Like” on Goodreads… I forget for which book. I threw it on my list and IMMEDIATELY people on Twitter were saying “Loved it. You have to read it.”
I bought it because it was the first thing to come to mind when I was showing a friend how to buy books directly from the Kindle. I remembered all the praise, and click-click… it was mine. I’m really glad I picked that one up!
I’m not going to tell you much about Bee, because much as it’s suggested on the Goodreads description, it’s just too good to be spoiled by explanation. I will tell you that it is a very sad story, the kind of thing you don’t want to read when your seratonin levels are slumping. It’s a book about the realities of war, the frivolity of the western world, and the brutality of the parts of Africa most of us would rather just forget about.
The story is expertly written, its atmosphere and narrative style intimate, at moments uncomfortably so. The characters are real to you, real in their failures and their fears, all snarled up in a world they can’t help but keep stumbling through. None are exactly what they seem at the outset, and none get out unscathed.
The savior of the entire story is Charlie, the optimistic and wide-eyed three-year-old in a Batman suit, “fighting the baddies” and balancing out an appropriately bleak-hearted adult cast of characters. Charlie makes you laugh even when you think you shouldn’t. He’s a gem. If I have a son, I’ll want him to be as sweet as Charlie.
Bee herself runs the risk of being a two-dimensional character, until you know all of her secrets. Like thousands in her position, a good heart is clouded by awful memories and terrible burdens. It makes her transformation in the reader’s eyes all the more potent. The Bee you know through the biggest part of the story is not the Bee you will walk away from when you close the cover.
There are certain stories that get under your skin, that just can’t help but cling to you long after you’ve moved on from them. Little Bee is one of those stories for me. If you’re okay with that type of book, then Bee is a must read.
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