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Honeysuckle
A Novel
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Narrado por:
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Catrin Walker-Booth
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Geraint Rhys
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De:
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Bar Fridman-Tell
The Bear and the Nightingale meets Weyward in this enchanting, deeply compelling debut about love and power, autonomy and consent.
Named a Best Book of March 2026 by Barnes & Noble and Apple.
Once upon a time, on the edge between meadow and forest, there was a lonely child with only his older sister for company. In exchange for being left in peace, his sister made him a playmate—Daye, a girl woven from flowers and words. And for the first time, this boy, Rory, had a friend.
Rory couldn’t be happier, until he learns that Daye is a short-lived creature. At the end of each season, she must be woven back together or fall gruesomely apart. And every time Daye falls apart might be her last.
As Rory and Daye grow older and the line between friendship and romance begins to blur, Rory becomes desperate to break this cycle of bloom and decay. But the farther Rory pushes his research and experiments to lengthen Daye’s existence, the more Daye begins to wonder just how much control she really has over her own life.
As a loose reimagining of the story of Blodeuwedd from Welsh mythology, Honeysuckle is an entrancing, inventive, and unsettling debut.©2026 Bar Fridman-Tell (P)2026 Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Reseñas de la crítica
Lush and romantic with a hint of darkness, this unsettling tale of desire, power and fear is inspired by ancient Welsh mythology.
Fridman-Tell's gorgeous debut fantasy luxuriates on the border between romance and horror . . . Fridman-Tell uses her eerie fairy tale premise to masterfully unpick all of the squirmy ethical implications of the created-lover trope, spinning a story that is as powerful in its human aspects as in its magic. This stuns.
The novel is composed with brittle, devastating lyricism. Its horrors flutter beneath intoxicating layers of nature references . . . A flower girl magicked to life to be a boy’s playmate comes into her own in the exquisite fantasy novel Honeysuckle.
A fascinating combination of magic and science . . . Tackles issues of consent, bodily autonomy, and codependent relationships. Fridman-Tell has crafted a truly genre-defying story here, one that’ll fit perfectly next to Helen Oyeyemi and Carmen Maria Machado.
I’m a sucker for a dark fairy tale, and Fridman-Tell’s gorgeously rendered debut - featuring a Blodeuwedd, or woman made of flowers, from Welsh mythology - blew me away. Come for the lush prose and horror-tinged romance, stay for the incisive examination of autonomy and agency.
A lush, dreamlike, wholly intoxicating novel with the elegant lyricism of modern fantasy and the deep, dark roots of ancient folklore. Honeysuckle is a fever dream that I won’t soon forget.
Fridman-Tell’s debut joins the growing collection of soon-to-be gothic classics that have come out this year. Here, she reimagines Welsh mythology in a refreshing way, bending time, physics, love, and the emotional power of a fairy tale.
Before reading Bar Fridman-Tell’s grand debut, I’d never come across the word Blodeuwedd . . . Fridman-Tell takes the concept and conjures a world that contains both whimsy and abnormal desire.
A haunting reimagining.
Lush . . . eerie and oh-so-relevant.
[An] emotionally raw exploration of feminine interiority . . . examin[ing] desire, control, and psychological unraveling.
I haven’t been able to stop thinking about Honeysuckle since I read it. A Frankenstein-esque spirit haunts the pages through Daye’s love for Rory, which is woven and tangled with her existence. Fridman-Tell writes characters whose thoughts, worries, and flaws spill off the page into people and experiences I’m sure most readers know in some way. This was a simultaneously familiar and altogether unique reading experience. I highly, highly recommend!
A flower-threaded horror crafted from myth and brimming with lush prose, Honeysuckle is an incredibly timely story about the corrupting power of desire and control. Unsettling and stunning in equal measure.
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