I thought this would be a cute MG story based on the description, but it never resonated with me. Being a book for younger humans, I didn't expect China Miéville-level world building but I felt the story tried to bridge too lengthy a span by giving us a future with (almost) no bees (which would be rather catastrophic in major ways for the entire planet's flora AND fauna...) crossed with a cute concept of human children pollinating trees in lieu of bees. A bee-less dystopia is hardly a paradigm that MG children could grasp, probably, so it felt like an unnecessary backdrop. Honestly, it would be awful. So if you can set aside the background setting for the story, one would think the cute part, small humans - dressed as bees, for effect, surely - pollinating trees, and other children -dressed as pests, again, cuteness effects - stripping the tree of pests, would work fabulously. Not so.
(An aside: this child-as-pest remover was almost harder to construe as understandable to the MG set, as it meant the normal pest eaters - birds, mostly, were either no longer alive and thriving to do this, OR, as this book makes it out, the birds are also starving as a result of the bee-crash so not only must the pests be removed from the trees, but the birds must be scared away from the trees so the fruit isn't eaten. And now the freight train of way-too-many issues reaches full throttle. Absentee parents, physical abuse, emotional abuse, rich vs. poor, death, city vs. farm... It was all too much and not enough. Like a stew made by strangers who didn't know what the planned meal was. And the end result was quite unpalatable. A more personal gripe, but I could have 100% done without the weirdo linguistic flairs thrown in rather randomly throughout. They make the narrative clunky and over-trying instead of fun and kid-like. there were a few emotionally powerful scenes, which tells me MacDibble knows how to write MG, but they were lost in the overcomplex, unexplained backstory, messy familial relationships, and underdeveloped magical cuteness and fun-amazingness of small humans pollinating and pest-removing trees. Seriously, how is this book NOT fun at all?!?!? That's where it failed me. I understand the MG set is exposed to more these days in books, and that is great, AND that many of the Adult set read MG books, and that is also great, BUT if you're going to do issues in MG books maybe pick fewer and develop them more so they resonate? Or develop your cute factor!
OK, this went on way too much, so I'll stop picking at it. I expected something fun (and magical and wondrous...) and this was not fun (or...). Pretty dust jacket though.