Normally when I read a book I don't like to know too much about the author.
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For example, the ants encounter a myrmecologist who they regard as a hazard, hapless and baffling. The myrmecologist rides a bicycle: they call him "Wheeler."
*waggles eyebrows*
WHEELER? Get it?
It's this guy:
Wheeler was a contemporary of Grove. I wonder if they met?
...or if, like me, he just got sick of seeing the guy's name on every ant species.
(Wheeler is no slouch, coined the term 'superorganism' )
If you know anything of Mr. Grove let me in on it.
3/3
Would you write the companion to this book ?
One which explains everything a reader needs to know in order to understand the book ?(or, more realistically, start a website where enthusiast myrmecologists will collaboratively write that companion ?)
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I'm seriously thinking about doing a youTube "read along" with images to illustrate some of the ants mentioned, and notes about where he's correct about ants and where's it's wrong.
This is complicated by the fact that the story is told by an unreliable ant narrator... and that the unreliable of the narrator is one of the major themes.
It could be fun.
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Normally when I read a book I don't like to know too much about the author. But, at last I've had to go find out who is this "Frederick Philip Grove."
He's mostly famous, not for his science fiction book "Consider Her Ways" about ants-- but his books about "life on the prairie" in Canada.
This sounds dreary to me. But I will check it out.
"Consider Her Ways" was the last fiction book he wrote and I don't think any review I've read of it understands it at all.
1/
I remember the title but realised it was the Wyndham book of the same name. It's only CAD$3 on Kobo via Indigo books in Canada, so added to my virtual "to read" pile.
I started E.O. Wilson's Anthill: a novel, but didn't get into it.
My favourite ant(hill) character is Aunt Hillary, in the prelude to each chapter of Hofstadter's Gödel, Escher, Bach, though it's a very long time since I read it.
Now I'm wondering how many fiction books there are, featuring ants.
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I remember the title but realised it was the Wyndham book of the same name. It's only CAD$3 on Kobo via Indigo books in Canada, so added to my virtual "to read" pile.
I started E.O. Wilson's Anthill: a novel, but didn't get into it.
My favourite ant(hill) character is Aunt Hillary, in the prelude to each chapter of Hofstadter's Gödel, Escher, Bach, though it's a very long time since I read it.
Now I'm wondering how many fiction books there are, featuring ants.
"Now I'm wondering how many fiction books there are, featuring ants."
Not enough. But, we work daily and with great dedication to correct this issue.
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"Now I'm wondering how many fiction books there are, featuring ants."
Not enough. But, we work daily and with great dedication to correct this issue.
@futurebird @EricLawton The ants in Children of Time are unfortunately on the losing side of their epic struggle with the spiders.
️ 
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I remember the title but realised it was the Wyndham book of the same name. It's only CAD$3 on Kobo via Indigo books in Canada, so added to my virtual "to read" pile.
I started E.O. Wilson's Anthill: a novel, but didn't get into it.
My favourite ant(hill) character is Aunt Hillary, in the prelude to each chapter of Hofstadter's Gödel, Escher, Bach, though it's a very long time since I read it.
Now I'm wondering how many fiction books there are, featuring ants.
@EricLawton And I remember, unfortunately, only very vaguely, a wonderful feature film in which a rather quirky ant researcher from earlier times (19th c or beginning 20th) appeared, who had really existed. I can't remember the film even with the best will but would like to see it gain!
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"Now I'm wondering how many fiction books there are, featuring ants."
Not enough. But, we work daily and with great dedication to correct this issue.
@futurebird @EricLawton This is my personal favorite.
The Colony: A Political Tale
Read reviews from the world’s largest community for readers. "The A Political Tale" is an allegory about foreign policy told through two colonies of ants.…
Goodreads (www.goodreads.com)
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"Now I'm wondering how many fiction books there are, featuring ants."
Not enough. But, we work daily and with great dedication to correct this issue.
@futurebird @EricLawton Children of Time by Adrian Tchaikovsky
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"Now I'm wondering how many fiction books there are, featuring ants."
Not enough. But, we work daily and with great dedication to correct this issue.
@futurebird @EricLawton there are in some of the discworld books
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"Now I'm wondering how many fiction books there are, featuring ants."
Not enough. But, we work daily and with great dedication to correct this issue.
Is there a section with ants in The Once and Future King, or am I misremembering?
That's the first thing that comes to mind when I think about ants in fiction, but considering how uncertain I am, it's probably not a great example!
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@EricLawton And I remember, unfortunately, only very vaguely, a wonderful feature film in which a rather quirky ant researcher from earlier times (19th c or beginning 20th) appeared, who had really existed. I can't remember the film even with the best will but would like to see it gain!
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"Now I'm wondering how many fiction books there are, featuring ants."
Not enough. But, we work daily and with great dedication to correct this issue.
@futurebird
Watership Down but ants?
@EricLawton -
"Now I'm wondering how many fiction books there are, featuring ants."
Not enough. But, we work daily and with great dedication to correct this issue.
@futurebird
Ursula Leguin has a short story about ants called "The Author of the Acacia Seeds". -
@EricLawton And I remember, unfortunately, only very vaguely, a wonderful feature film in which a rather quirky ant researcher from earlier times (19th c or beginning 20th) appeared, who had really existed. I can't remember the film even with the best will but would like to see it gain!
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@queenofnewyork Unfortunately not. It was a newer film than 50/60s. But it brings me to the idea to look for films with entomologists, thanks! Difficult, because the guy in the film had a different name, it was written at the end that his person was based on a real scientist.
@EricLawton @futurebird -
"Now I'm wondering how many fiction books there are, featuring ants."
Not enough. But, we work daily and with great dedication to correct this issue.
@futurebird @EricLawton children of time by Adrian Tchaikovsky. it also features sentient spiders. great read.
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@EricLawton And I remember, unfortunately, only very vaguely, a wonderful feature film in which a rather quirky ant researcher from earlier times (19th c or beginning 20th) appeared, who had really existed. I can't remember the film even with the best will but would like to see it gain!
@NatureMC
Would it be "Angels And Insects?"
https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x8hsnfe -
@queenofnewyork Unfortunately not. It was a newer film than 50/60s. But it brings me to the idea to look for films with entomologists, thanks! Difficult, because the guy in the film had a different name, it was written at the end that his person was based on a real scientist.
@EricLawton @futurebird@queenofnewyork @EricLawton @futurebird Yeah, it worked! I found it: Angels And Insects https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angels_and_Insects after a novel (probably not a real person). Thank you for brainstorming!
the movie: https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x9fco6e
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@NatureMC
Would it be "Angels And Insects?"
https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x8hsnfe@snork303 Exactly this!!! Thank you ... now I can see it again.
@EricLawton @futurebird -
@queenofnewyork @EricLawton @futurebird Yeah, it worked! I found it: Angels And Insects https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angels_and_Insects after a novel (probably not a real person). Thank you for brainstorming!
the movie: https://www.dailymotion.com/video/x9fco6e
@NatureMC @EricLawton @futurebird
OMG! "6,000 ants were brought in initially for the forest colony scenes, but they walked off before filming. Another 6,000 were brought in as a replacement, only for the original 6,000 to return."
That is fantastic!