Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

The Bee on the Comb

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Language
  
English

Pages
  
32

Author
  
Genre
  
Country
  
United Kingdom

Publisher
  
Jonathan Cape

Originally published
  
1984

Page count
  
32

Illustrator
  

Similar
  
Masquerade, Engines of Ingenuity, Out of one eye

The Bee on the Comb is an armchair treasure hunt book, written and illustrated by Kit Williams and published in May 1984. It is a follow-up to Williams' previous treasure hunt book Masquerade, although not a direct sequel.

Contents

The book was initially published without a visible title, with the result that it is also known as "Untitled", and "the bee book" and other variations. Discovering the book's true title was the basis of a competition for readers.

Plot

The book tells the story of a day in the life of a beekeeper named Ambrose, and how he and his bees are affected by personifications of the four seasons.

Contest

The Bee on the Comb is an armchair treasure hunt, although participants did not have to physically find the treasure. Readers were challenged to discover the book's proper title, and to send that title to the author, expressed creatively but non-verbally. The prize - a golden 'queen bee' statuette and a unique titled copy of the book - would be awarded to the entrant whom Kit Williams judged to have expressed the title in the most interesting way.

The contest had a set duration of "a year and a day" from publication of the book, so came to an end on 25 May 1985. Kit Williams appeared on the BBC chat show Wogan to judge the finalists' entries and announce the winner. The winner was Steve Pearce, of Leicester, who submitted a small decorated cabinet that depicted the title when the handle was turned.

References

The Bee on the Comb Wikipedia


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