slow motion bees representing the sound of bees buzzing in nature

The Sound of Bees Buzzing

A single line about the sound of buzzing bees, buried in a war story, and why it stayed with me long after I closed the book

From my Bee Books series, inspired by
Angel Down by Daniel Kraus

Gray Days

The weather turned again this weekend. Gray. Cold. Nasty.

The book I was reading matched the mood—full of smoke, harshness, and people doing what they had to do to survive. I almost didn’t finish Angel Down. It’s vivid, relentless, and at times hard to sit with. The story takes place on the Western Front during World War I, following a group of soldiers—led by a man named Baggers—on a strange and violent mission.

It’s not an easy read. And it’s not meant to be.

One Line

But then, there was this one simple line:

“The sound of bees buzzing.”

It stopped me.

The Buzz I Don’t Know

Not because it was peaceful. It wasn’t.

The bees were layered into a chorus of insects, birds, even hyenas—an overwhelming, almost unbearable shriek of the natural world reacting to the violence around it. It wasn’t the gentle hum we think of. It was something sharper. More urgent. Almost accusatory.

And still
bees.

In the middle of a battlefield, where would those bees even be? And how could anyone actually hear them?

You probably couldn’t.

But the line stayed with me.

The Buzz I Know

Later that day, I sat on my deck, feet up, watching my own bees and finishing the book in the sun.

In the morning, I had moved a small colony—a nuc—from one yard to another so I could keep a closer eye on it. In the car, they buzzed together. A low, steady, contained sound.

Not loud. Not frantic. Just
present.

In the afternoon, I helped a new beekeeper who had lost track of her queen. We couldn’t find her. The hive had a different kind of buzz—subtle, unsettled. A searching sound. If you’ve been around bees long enough, you can hear it.

In both moments, I understood the sound.

And that’s what made that line in the book feel so strange.

Because the sound of buzzing bees I know isn’t violent. It isn’t chaotic. Even when something is wrong, there’s still a kind of order to it.

Which makes you wonder what it meant to hear bees like that—inside a world that had lost all sense of order.

There are other surprises in Angel Down. I won’t give them away. But it’s a book that stays with you, whether you want it to or not.

For me, it was that one line.

The Sound That Remains

The sound of bees buzzing.

There’s a reason people are drawn to that sound. Even when you don’t keep bees, there’s something about a steady, living hum that settles you—something your body understands before your mind does.

A small, familiar thing—placed in a place where it didn’t belong.

And a reminder that sometimes, it’s the smallest details that cut through the noise.

The bees notice. I notice.