
Lulu Meets The Bees
Anna McQuinn and Rosalind Beardshaw
Alanna Max
Full of curiosity, young Lulu is excited when she accompanies her mum to visit her friend, a beekeeper who lives in the city. As the adults chat Lulu carefully observes the bees foraging for food among the flowers. They then go up onto the roof of her home where Zora has her hives and there watch the worker bees returning having collected nectar and pollen. Then because Lulu is to go right up close to the baby bees when Zora shows her inside the hives, Lulu has to put on a special protective suit after which Zora lights a smoker to make it easier to work with her bees. Inside the brood box are the baby bees and Lulu is fascinated by the contents of the cells

Zora also shows Lulu the queen bee and next they move on to a hive atop which is a ‘super’, a compartment wherein the bees store extra honey.
A treat is in store when Lulu tastes some of the delicious honey from Zora’s bees and so inspired is the little girl by all she’s seen and heard that she asks Zora how she too can help bees. Being Lulu, she begins creating her own bee-friendly wild place as soon as she gets back home.
A lovely way for young children to learn some basic information about bees, Anna McQuinn’s text together with Rosalind Beardshaw’s scenes of the visit to a beekeeper are an example of narrative non-fiction for preschool children at its best.