Le Miroir de Cassandre explained

Le miroir de Cassandre
Author:Bernard Werber
Genre:Novel
Language:French
Pub Date:2009
Country:France, Paris
Pages:631

Le miroir de Cassandre (lit. The Mirror of Cassandra) is a book written by Bernard Werber.

The themes of the book are: future-seeing, freedom, exclusion, the future of humanity and autism. The name of the protagonist is a reference to the Cassandra from Homer's Iliad, who receives a gift from the god Apollo: the ability to see into the future.

Presentation of the book

The following is a translation of the presentation of the book available on the author's French website:[1]

What would you do If you could see the future And nobody believed?

Plot summary

"Il sera une fois" (There will be)Cassandra Katzenberg has the ability to see into the future, but cannot remember anything before the bomb attack in Egypt which killed both her parents. After running away from the school of the Hirondelles, she finds refuge in "Redemption", a village improvised by 4 refugees in a dump yard.
"Il est une fois" (There is)
"Il était une fois" (There has been)

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Presentation of Bernard Werber's books, on his website.