63 pages • 2 hours read
Jodi Picoult, Jennifer Finney BoylanA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Honey, which even finds its way into the book’s title, symbolizes honey multiple things over the course of the story. As an apiarist, Olivia harvests and sells honey for a living. In this way, honey represents her livelihood and what allows her family to thrive. The bear attack on one of her colonies is thus significant as a threat—and it takes place on the same day as Lily’s death. Olivia knows that the bees won’t survive the winter after losing their honey stores; accordingly, by March, they’re all dead. Similarly, Lily’s death marks a turning point for Olivia and Asher’s lives, and by the spring and the start of the trial, their lives have already been altered forever.
In addition, honey is a source of comfort in tough times. Olivia jots down recipes that use honey in her notebook throughout the trial. One of these recipes is a dessert made as a New Year’s Eve tradition and is a comforting memory for her and Asher; another is a honey loaf that Olivia bakes for Asher to commiserate a loss. Also, “honey” is a term of endearment that Ava sometimes calls Lily.
In contrast, Olivia describes “mad honey”—the type of honey that lends the book its name.
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