<p>This book was derived from papers given at the meeting organised by the International&nbsp;Bee Research Association entitled: &ldquo;Honey and healing: from the hive to the hospital&rdquo;&nbsp;which was held at the University of Cardiff on 7 October 2000. The programme for the&nbsp;meeting stated: &ldquo;Man has known the curative properties of honey from the earliest times.</p><p>We may have forgotten in latter years just what medicinal benefits the golden harvest of&nbsp;the hive can bring. Perhaps with bacteria ever more resistant to antibiotics and viruses&nbsp;that seemingly defeat the medical world it is time to look once again to one of nature&rsquo;s&nbsp;own medicines that has a scientifically proven track record&rdquo;.</p><p>The book was originally published in 2001 but has been out of print for a number of&nbsp;years. Sadly Peter Molan who contributed two chapters died in 2015. In his obituary&nbsp;published in <em>Bee World</em> his colleague Prof. Rose Cooper wrote: &ldquo;I met Peter Molan by&nbsp;chance late in 1996 when I was collecting wound swabs from outpatients attending the&nbsp;Wound Healing Research Unit&rsquo;s clinic at the University Hospital of Wales. He was visiting&nbsp;his mother in Cardiff (where he was born and brought up) and had come to the hospital to&nbsp;<span style=line-height:1.6>promote the use of manuka honey in treating wounds. We chatted for about an hour and&nbsp;</span><span style=line-height:1.6>he offered to send me some samples of honey when he returned to New Zealand. I did&nbsp;</span><span style=line-height:1.6>my first experiments on the antibacterial activity of honey in 1997 and it marked the start&nbsp;</span><span style=line-height:1.6>of a wonderful collaboration that changed the course of my professional life&rdquo;.</span></p><p>It is thus fitting that we republish this popular book.</p>