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Empire of the Ants

Bernard Werber Margaret Rocques

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English
Corgi Books
01 April 1997
A fascinating novel about the world of the ants.

Ants came to this planet long before man. Since then they have developed one of the most intricate civilizations imaginable - a civilization of great richness and technological brilliance. During the few seconds it takes you to read this sentence, some 700 milli0on ants will be born on earth...

Edmond Wells had studied ants for years- he knew of the power which existed in their hidden world. On his death, he leaves his apartment to his nephew Jonathan with one proviso- that he must not descend beyond the cellar door. But when the family's dog escapes down the cellar steps, Jonathan has little alternative but to follow. Innocently he enters the world of the ant, whose struggle for existence forces him to reassess man's place in the cycle of nature. It is an experience that will alter his life for ever...

Empire of the Ants is an extraordinary achievement. It takes you inside the ants' universe and reveals it to be a highly organised world, as complex and relentless as human society and even more brutal.
By:  
Translated by:  
Imprint:   Corgi Books
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Edition:   New edition
Dimensions:   Height: 177mm,  Width: 107mm,  Spine: 21mm
Weight:   183g
ISBN:   9780552141123
ISBN 10:   0552141127
Pages:   352
Publication Date:  
Recommended Age:   From 0 years
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Bernard Werber is a young scientific journalist who has studied ants for the last fifteen years. He lives in Paris. The sequel to Empire of the Ants, Le Jour des Fourmis, has already been published by Albin Michel.

Reviews for Empire of the Ants

First published in France in 1991, this ingenious anthropomorphic fantasy draws disturbing parallels between the rigidly structured empire in which ants work, multiply, make war, and survive and the less ordered lives of their most dangerous predators: human beings. Weber expertly weaves together weirdly beautiful near-documentary descriptions of ant culture with the story of the Wells family, Americans resettled in Paris, who ignore the orders of their late Uncle Edmond (an entomological researcher, and author of an idiosyncratic encyclopedia - from which we're given snippets) to Never go down into the cellar! The mystery of their subsequent disappearances, and of the fated encounter between human and insect societies, is hidden within a mathematical puzzle whose solution precipitates a thoroughly satisfying denouement. A tour de force. (Kirkus Reviews)


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