Online RA Book Club discussion

This topic is about
The Bees
The Bees
>
Chapters 41- Final thoughts and Read-alike
date
newest »

message 1:
by
Lisa
(new)
Jan 01, 2016 08:48PM

reply
|
flag
I really enjoyed listening to this book. The story of Flora 717 is great. NoveList had a suggestion of a follow up book of Empire of the Ants by Bernard Werber. Very similar to The Bee's - it explores the lives of ants. This is the review from NoveList:
"What if 007 were an ant? He would be 103,683rd, the hero of this book, named for her birth order. She battles and escapes, using creative weapons and fighting theory true to ant nature. 103,683rd and other ants are investigating a secret weapon that smells strangely like rocks and is only known about by ants. Along the way, they survive wars between neighboring anthills, birds, frogs, and other insects trying to eat or enslave them. Set in a less satisfying story about humans discovering a mysterious basement laboratory that their reclusive uncle built to contact ants, the ants' story is fascinating for its ant facts, ant's-eye perspective, and the brave assumption that ant's lives are as attention-grabbing as any action movie. Like Watership Down or The Hobbit, Werber's book creates another world so like ours and so finely detailed that the reader feels a part of it. Keep your antennae out for this one."
"What if 007 were an ant? He would be 103,683rd, the hero of this book, named for her birth order. She battles and escapes, using creative weapons and fighting theory true to ant nature. 103,683rd and other ants are investigating a secret weapon that smells strangely like rocks and is only known about by ants. Along the way, they survive wars between neighboring anthills, birds, frogs, and other insects trying to eat or enslave them. Set in a less satisfying story about humans discovering a mysterious basement laboratory that their reclusive uncle built to contact ants, the ants' story is fascinating for its ant facts, ant's-eye perspective, and the brave assumption that ant's lives are as attention-grabbing as any action movie. Like Watership Down or The Hobbit, Werber's book creates another world so like ours and so finely detailed that the reader feels a part of it. Keep your antennae out for this one."