Mad Honey: A Novel

4.4 out of 5

58,691 global ratings

NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • “Alternatingly heart-pounding and heartbreaking. This collaboration between two best-selling authors seamlessly weaves together Olivia and Lily’s journeys, creating a provocative exploration of the strength that love and acceptance require.”—The Washington Post

GOOD MORNING AMERICA BOOK CLUB PICK • PEOPLE’S BOOK OF THE WEEK • ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR: PopSugar

Olivia McAfee knows what it feels like to start over. Her picture-perfect life—living in Boston, married to a brilliant cardiothoracic surgeon, raising their beautiful son, Asher—was upended when her husband revealed a darker side. She never imagined that she would end up back in her sleepy New Hampshire hometown, living in the house she grew up in and taking over her father’s beekeeping business.

Lily Campanello is familiar with do-overs, too. When she and her mom relocate to Adams, New Hampshire, for her final year of high school, they both hope it will be a fresh start.

And for just a short while, these new beginnings are exactly what Olivia and Lily need. Their paths cross when Asher falls for the new girl in school, and Lily can’t help but fall for him, too. With Ash, she feels happy for the first time. Yet she wonders if she can trust him completely. . . .

Then one day, Olivia receives a phone call: Lily is dead, and Asher is being questioned by the police. Olivia is adamant that her son is innocent. But she would be lying if she didn’t acknowledge the flashes of his father’s temper in Ash, and as the case against him unfolds, she realizes he’s hidden more than he’s shared with her.

Mad Honey is a riveting novel of suspense, an unforgettable love story, and a moving and powerful exploration of the secrets we keep and the risks we take in order to become ourselves.

480 pages,

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Audiobook

Hardcover

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Audio CD

First published September 4, 2023

ISBN 9781984818409


About the authors

Jodi Picoult

Jodi Picoult

Jodi Picoult is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of twenty-eight novels, including Wish You Were Here, The Book of Two Ways, A Spark of Light, Small Great Things, Leaving Time, and My Sister's Keeper, and, with daughter Samantha van Leer, two young adult novels, Between the Lines and Off the Page. Picoult lives in New Hampshire.

Her next novel, Mad Honey, co-written with Jennifer Finney Boylan, is available on October 11th.

Follow Jodi Picoult on Intagram, Twitter, and Facebook: @jodipicoult

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Reviews

CC

CC

5

loved it

Reviewed in the United States on July 7, 2024

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This book is a wonderful mix of wonderful storytelling, engaging characters, and thoughtfully presented information. It is smart and still a page turner.

Bibliomaniac

Bibliomaniac

5

The authors should be credited "Jennifer Finney Boylan with Jodi Picoult"

Reviewed in the United States on February 20, 2024

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I tend to have a love/hate relationship with Jodi Picoult books. I live her stories, hate her endings. And I really hate that that's the first thing that comes to mind in reviewing this book.

It is an amazing book. The absolute best thing I can say about Picoult is that she doesn't write the same book over and over. She tackles new topics in every book of hers that I've read, and I've read most of them. Sometimes I forget who I'm reading because every book is so different. I think even the writing style is unique to each story.

But enough about Jodi, Jennifer, I'm sorry. It's your story, literally your dream child, and Jodi gets top billing on everything, even in this review. But one thing she gets absolutely right is that she couldn't have told this story without you because it isn't her story to tell. I think this is my introduction to you and I will be reading much more. I'm also sorry you didn't win the Detective Mike argument. Lol And I am curious who's idea was the ending, the reveal of the culprit, so to speak. I blamed it on your coauthor because whack endings are the one thing that you can count on in a Picoult book but not having read you before, I admit I could be wrong.

Regardless it's an amazing book. To get 5* from me a book has to make me laugh and cry. And oh it did just that. I also have to have someone to root for. I loved almost all the characters and realistically every book has to have an antagonist or two, so the characters were perfect. I also should relate to it in some way no matter how small. There was a lot that could be pulled from my own story both as a child and as a mother.

For some of my book club friends, to get five stars, they require a book to be something that everyone should read. Something that everyone can get something from. I haven't looked yet to see how they rated it but for me, this is one of those books. I think we live in a time when being trans or enby or anywhere in the LGBTQ+ spectrum has so much more acceptance than ever before and at the same time so much more opposition. The more acceptance anything other than the "traditional male/female sex assignment" gets, the more those that think it's truth need to fight to maintain their status quo. The strongest purpose of fiction is empathy. It's to allow ourselves to walk around in another person's shoes and find out how our preconceived notions are wrong and how they inhibit other people. Obviously if every person in the world read this book, many would identify more with Braden, or Lily's father, or Dirk and completely miss the point. One of the book club questions is, can someone like them change. It's not easy, but I have seen it happen. The reason there is more acceptance of differing genders is because people can change. But there are also people in this world like Olivia who just don't have a cl inue until they have the first conversation, until the first time they walk around in those shoes. So I do think everyone should try all these various shoes on for size.

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27 people found this helpful

Natasha D. Newman

Natasha D. Newman

5

Exceptional

Reviewed in the United States on June 23, 2024

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The book contained moments of laughter, sadness, realization, and self-reflection of one’s own beliefs. Mystery, love, empowerment and bee facts, a reader can’t ask for more in a novel.

TeeMee-Kraftqueen65-Obsessive Reader

TeeMee-Kraftqueen65-Obsessive Reader

5

Mind Blowing All The Way Through/Library Loan

Reviewed in the United States on May 8, 2023

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My apologies for this review being as lengthy as it is, but I just couldn’t find anyway to shorten it. 🙃

I was immediately captivated by the storyline and the characters as the plot began to unfurl from page 1, and onward. Having said that, I’m not surprised, considering that Picoult was a contributing writer for this book. No disrespect meant toward Boylan, I’m just simply not familiar with her writing.

There is a huge amount of intensity, both good and bad, as well as contentment and certainty regarding the mother/son relationship, the other mothers, and Lily (one of the key characters) as well as the strong bad-ass females that are representing for our gender. (Hoo-gah!!)

There is an undeniability, together with an apprehensiveness, as to what is eventually expected to unfold as told on the "jacket cover" description provided by the publisher/writer.

This begins to build as the reader is submersed further into the narrative, and as the story moves around from the POV’s provided by two main characters of the story. You’ve previously been forewarned, and conscious of what is yet to come. Even if you care to have it delayed a bit longer, it’s one of those novels you irrefutably can not put down. It’s like watching a passenger train on the tracks, knowing it’s about to derail, and it’s evident there’s nothing you can do to stop it, yet you can’t turn away from the horror that’s about to unfold before your eyes.

There is one major key genre that is curiously left out of any of the previews, but to have it included, would destroy what is to develop at a later stage. It would’ve been a HUGE spoiler. For that reason, it makes it even more difficult in writing this review. I honor the writers, and will not mention it here either.

All I can say is to continue reading through, until the end to see why my mind was so completely blown! The ending alone regarding the responsibility of Lily’s death, is another mind stunner.

I also want to mention, that while reading, I was very curious and hoped to be enlightened as to who wrote which sections of the book. Thank goodness I always read what the authors write in the the "Dear readers:" section, as will as anything else that follows. I unequivocally feel the need to include something Jennifer Finney Boylan states in her ending message/notes: "All of us have something in our hearts like a flower that cannot bloom because it is held in secret. The adventure of life can be to get that thing out of the darkness where it lies and let the sun shine on it. So it can go back inside your heart facing the right direction." WOW! Doesn’t it appear we all have that abysmal, cavernous secret buried so far down, it’ll never see the light of day again, if it were up to us? Imagine considering her outlook toward it instead? Just something to ponder at a later date, possibly…

And I also feel the need to share something that Picoult wrote in her ending message/notes: "What would I like you to take away from this novel? Absolutely nothing. I’d like you to give—a chance, a thought, a damn. Like gender, difference is a construct. We are all flawed, complicated, wounded dreamers; we have more in common with one another than we don’t. Sometimes making the world a better place just involves creating space for the people who are already in it. —Jodi Picoult" Another WOW moment!

I rarely give out 5 star ratings and have a system of 3 key qualifiers, one of which is: "Those that profoundly affected my whole being while reading, and left an intense deeply-rooted impression as well."

This one is a 5 star rating for sure, and I significantly advocate, encourage, and recommend this as a Must Read Novel.

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106 people found this helpful

Read001

Read001

5

mad honey

Reviewed in the United States on July 15, 2024

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Loved the book. Very well written. It provided insight into human diversity. Helped me understand trans gender and other LGBTQ terminology and what a child goes thru in understanding themselves, accepting it and trying to move on.

Miranda Erwin

Miranda Erwin

5

WOWZA

Reviewed in the United States on July 6, 2024

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This book. Wow... This book. I was shocked at how much I just needed to read this every day, I needed to go to this place and keep up with their daily encounters. There's a couple nice plot twists, I was shocked at the first one, the second I felt was coming, but couldn't be 100% positive! If you don't like the thought of reading about a subject that involves the LGBTQIA+ and those in that extraordinary community, then you may not enjoy this read. However, I recommend that you're precisely the kind of person who may need, or benefit most, from reading this. These characters are so easy to fall in love with, and identify with. Truly a great read and even better story of a life journey you might just need to travel on.

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Laurynn Verry

Laurynn Verry

4

Long, but good!

Reviewed in the United States on July 26, 2024

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I went into this book having no idea what it was about, and loved it! The authors explain and present everything in a great way. Just a little long for my liking. I also could tell “who done it” from the start, but the book threw a few curveballs.

BooksAreWings

BooksAreWings

4

Compelling novel with some flaws, but Picoult and Boylan can do no wrong

Reviewed in the United States on December 27, 2023

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So, first of all, this book reminded me why I love Jodi Picoult and need to read more of her books. Picoult can be counted on to deliver a well-written, powerful, human narrative that's still a relatively easy read. Looking for a "beach read" that's great instead of trashy? JP is your woman. Here she partners with Boylan who is also a great writer, and in all honesty, it's seamless and does not for a moment read like a collab.

Mad Honey is compelling from the start with hero characters including Olivia, a single mom/power beekeeper/abuse survivor, Lily, a teen savant/cellist/depressive/also survivor, and Asher, a teen Prince Charming whose hidden depths- and hidden pain- no one but Lily truly sees.

Quickly this becomes a murder mystery and trial procedural, so, again, super entertaining and also emotionally intense. For the first probably half of the book, I did not want to put it down.

I really want to avoid spoilers here. I will say there's a major plot twist, an interesting one, but unfortunately at this point the book takes a dive. There is SO MUCH explication to support the plot that the book becomes more of a textbook and less of a novel. For me personally I didn't need 99% of this surrounding information, it was familiar to me - and I think it would be at least understandable to anyone who would love this book. This is the point where, I think, the writers needed to decide if they would rather just tell a story and let the reader fill in, or if they needed to inform and provide massive context, and they chose the latter. The book is about 30% longer as a result (insert head-banging emoji).

I really loved the writing here; the character development; and the power and empathy with which the writers communicated painful and joyful things. But just as a novel it's a super-flawed book: there's all this endless explication, the ending is unsatisfying, and you can see the real whodunit coming from miles away.

If I were not such a fan of the intent here, I'd say three stars.

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18 people found this helpful

STwilight

STwilight

4

A must read, very compelling story

Reviewed in the United States on March 26, 2024

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This book came highly recommended by book club friends, and it is definitely a compelling story. I will be discussing spoilers so if you do not want to know, please do not read beyond this point. It was a very compelling story which dealt in a sensitive issue both with the question of domestic violence, its unknown and known effects on children, and transgender youth. I thought that all of these issues were dealt with in a realistic, emotional, and real way. As author Boylan is transgender, I felt like it was her chance to give transgender individuals a much-needed voice. Lily personified what so many transgender individuals who are not able to provide a mirror to their inner lives and struggles. I also appreciated how Boylan educated us that being transgender is much like anything else in life-each transgender individual is unique, do not all think the same way, and especially do not have the same journey.

Another strength in this story is the real and raw exploration of domestic violence. Yes, it was difficult to read. However, I think that Picoult and Boylan did an excellent job of exploring the large questions about abuse, what makes and abuser, and most importantly, what happens to the children of abusers? I admire how Picoult and Boylan were able to bring to life all the complex emotions of a mother whose son has turned into what seems her worst nightmare. She wanted to protect her son, she doubted him, and she loved him so much that she would do anything to protect him. She had to ask herself very difficult questions and face the reality of bearing her abuser's son. I was drawn into the complexities of Olivia's emotions and felt like I completely understood them.

The only flaw in the writing is that the story became a bit outrageous and sensationalistic at the end. It felt more like the unlikely end of a TV movie rather than what should have been the end to a story which could have played in any courtroom in the United States. I just felt like it could have finished a bit more realistically, because the rest of the story was so compelling. I highly recommend this story for so many reasons, you will be educated and will experience the full gamut of emotions of a mother with an impossible burden.

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12 people found this helpful

Amazon Customer

Amazon Customer

3

Started off great, but became too political for my taste

Reviewed in the United States on June 11, 2024

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I thought the story line was great, but felt the author was trying to push their political beliefs on the audience. Just my opinion, but I felt I was being preached to in certain parts of the book, which isn't why I chose this book to read.

25 people found this helpful