cover image Sea Bean: A Beachcomber’s Search for a Magical Charm

Sea Bean: A Beachcomber’s Search for a Magical Charm

Sally Huband. HarperOne, $19.99 trade paper (352p) ISBN 978-0-06-338458-3

Nature conservationist Huband’s beautifully written debut interweaves reflections on her physical and mental health struggles with musings on the natural world. In 2011, Huband moved to Shetland, Scotland, for her husband’s work as a pilot. There, she became pregnant with the couple’s second child and experienced immobilizing pain, leading to a diagnosis of inflammatory arthritis. Worn down by the pain and feeling trapped, Huband began taking walks to clear her head. During one, she noticed the corpses of two seabirds, leading her to volunteer for the Royal Society of the Protection of Birds to monitor such deaths. That work required her to take long walks on the beach, and Huband’s encounters with the local flora and fauna sent her down research rabbit holes about subjects including shark eggs, witchcraft, and plastics pollution. Eventually, she put together a wish list of items she hoped to come across on her walks, including the sea bean of the title, “a type of drift seed that sometimes washes ashore in a cold northern climate where they cannot naturally grow.” Huband’s knack for metaphor extends beyond the sea bean—a colony of terns becomes “a swirling cloud of white that takes on a maleficent form.” Such rapturous language, combined with Huband’s infectious curiosity about the world around her, make this sing. (Nov.)