Empire of the Ants (novel) explained

Empire of the Ants
Title Orig:Les Fourmis
Author:Bernard Werber
Country:France
Language:French
Series:Les Fourmis trilogy
Genre:Novel
Publisher:Le Livre de Poche
Release Date:1991
Media Type:Print (Paperback & Hardback)
Pages:306

Les Fourmis (English: italic=1|The Ants) is a 1991 science fiction novel by French writer Bernard Werber. It was released in English as Empire of the Ants. The book sold more than two million copies and has been translated into more than 30 languages. It was also taken to video game format.

Les Fourmis is the first novel of La Saga des Fourmis trilogy[1] (also known as La Trilogie des Fourmis (The Trilogy of the Ants),[2] followed by Le Jour des fourmis (The Day of the Ants, 1992) and La Révolution des fourmis (The Revolution of the Ants, 1996).[3]

Plot

The plot begins as two stories that take place in parallel: one in the world of humans (in Paris), the other in the world of ants (in a Formica rufa colony in a park near Paris). The time is the early 21st century (the near future, relative to the time when Werber wrote the book). The human character receives a house and a provocative message as inheritance from his recently deceased uncle. He begins to investigate his uncle's life and mysterious activities, and decides to descend into the cellar of the house but does not return. His family and other people follow and disappear. The ant character is a male whose foraging expedition gets destroyed in one strike by a mysterious force that comes from above. He suspects that a colony of another ant species has attacked them with a secret weapon, and attempts to meet with the queen and to rally other ants to investigate the disaster. However, he attracts the attention of a secret group of ants within the same colony that appear to want to conceal this information. As the plot unfolds, the humans and the ants encounter new mysteries and participate in challenging events, including a war between different ant species.

Reception

The descriptions of ant morphology, behavior, and social organization as well as their interactions with other species are engaging, detailed, and scientifically based, although Werber significantly exaggerates the reasoning and communication capabilities of the ants (rendering his work labeled as science-fiction,[4] though some consider it more of a speculative fiction[5]).[6]

Katharine Mills, reviewing the book for SF Site, wrote: "The book is seeded with excerpts from Uncle Edmond's Encyclopedia, describing the ants' culture from a human perspective, a device which, combined with the intimate glimpses of their daily lives, illustrates the superficiality of human scientific observation." She also posed: "The real question, the final question left at the end of the book when all the other mysteries have been solved is this: Are humans really ready to communicate with another species? And, more frighteningly, what happens next -- when our efforts have drawn the attention of the other species to us? Read Empire of the Ants, and contemplate it."[7]

Video game

See main article: Empire of the Ants (video game). The novel was adapted as a 3D strategy video game for the Microsoft Windows platform; it was developed and published by Microïds in France on April 20, 2000; and published by Strategy First on July 17, 2001.

A new video game adaptation, with photo-realistic visuals, is slated for release in November 2024. It is being developed by Tower Five and will also be published by Microids.[8]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Goodreads. La Saga des Fourmis. Werber, Bernard.
  2. Book: Goodreads. La Trilogie des Fourmis. Werber, Bernard.
  3. Book: Werber, Berard. La Révolution des fourmis (The Revolution of the Ants). 1996.
  4. Ants and the Humans Who Love Them . American Entomologist . Winter 2013 . Matan Shelomi . Shelomi . Matan . 208.
  5. Web site: Bernard Werber’s Poetics of Ecological Reconstruction. Desblache . Lucile.
  6. News: Robinson, Tasha . Bernard Werber: Empire of the Ants . . March 29, 2002 . October 7, 2017.
  7. Web site: Mills, Katharine . Empire of the Ants by Bernard Werber: A Review . . 1998.
  8. Web site: Empire of the Ants on Steam . 2024-07-04 . store.steampowered.com . en.