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Sci-Fi or Horror Books with Ants


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11 replies to this topic

#1 Offline kalimant - Posted April 28 2024 - 2:29 AM

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The first book I can think of is from the 1970s...

 

Serpent's Reach by  C. J. Cherryh

 

https://www.amazon.c...h/dp/0749301007

 

Anything else?


I currently maintain a site dedicated to the hyper-diverse myrmicine genus Pheidole.:

 

PHEIDOLE

 

I also own the Lurker's Guide to Leafcutters Ants

 


#2 Offline ANTdrew - Posted April 28 2024 - 3:40 AM

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Empire of the Ants by Bernard Werber is a really fun read.
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"The ants are a people not strong, yet they prepare their meat in the summer." Prov. 30:25
Keep ordinary ants in extraordinary ways.

#3 Offline kalimant - Posted April 28 2024 - 10:08 AM

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Empire of the Ants by Bernard Werber is a really fun read.

 

Ah! Yeah....I forgot about that. Good one with Linepithema humile and the Formica (?)

 

https://www.amazon.c...r/dp/0553573527


I currently maintain a site dedicated to the hyper-diverse myrmicine genus Pheidole.:

 

PHEIDOLE

 

I also own the Lurker's Guide to Leafcutters Ants

 


#4 Offline kalimant - Posted April 29 2024 - 12:24 PM

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In the 1970s, there were quite a few horror books that had various monstrous critters in them.

 

This was one I read when I was younger:

 

The Ants by Peter Tremayne

https://www.goodread...ok/show/7103314


I currently maintain a site dedicated to the hyper-diverse myrmicine genus Pheidole.:

 

PHEIDOLE

 

I also own the Lurker's Guide to Leafcutters Ants

 


#5 Offline Ernteameise - Posted May 4 2024 - 10:33 AM

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Just discovered this one:

The Cretaceous Human(ts) Extinction: When the ants took over (by Luis-Oliver St. Pierre).

Downloaded it for my Kindle.

Might become my holiday read when I have some time off the week after next.



#6 Offline kalimant - Posted May 4 2024 - 2:31 PM

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Just discovered this one:

The Cretaceous Human(ts) Extinction: When the ants took over (by Luis-Oliver St. Pierre).

Downloaded it for my Kindle.

Might become my holiday read when I have some time off the week after next.

 

Never heard of it, but it's new so...

 

 

https://www.amazon.c...k/dp/B0CVQ45LD8


I currently maintain a site dedicated to the hyper-diverse myrmicine genus Pheidole.:

 

PHEIDOLE

 

I also own the Lurker's Guide to Leafcutters Ants

 


#7 Offline kalimant - Posted May 6 2024 - 3:56 AM

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I had this paperback when I was younger. Part of my SF collection.

 

It had great scenes of Atta leafcutters fighting against army ants, if I remember correctly.

 

The Micronauts by Gordon M. Williams

https://www.goodread...ook/show/874830


I currently maintain a site dedicated to the hyper-diverse myrmicine genus Pheidole.:

 

PHEIDOLE

 

I also own the Lurker's Guide to Leafcutters Ants

 


#8 Offline Ernteameise - Posted May 8 2024 - 11:06 AM

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So I have now started reading the above mentioned  "The Cretaceous Human(ts) Extinction: When the ants took over (by Luis-Oliver St. Pierre)".
It is a time travel / parallel universe horror story about two scientists marooned on a parallel earth after a badly gone wrong portal experiment.
This parallel earth has giant ants that attack and devour everything on sight.
This book is of the genre "horror road trip" where the protagonists have to flee across country to reach safety. Basically like every other zombie story, just with giant man-eating ants instead of zombies.
It is very well paced and pretty well written.
Lots of easter-eggs for ant keepers (the guy who wrote it is member in one of my ant FB groups).
I had expected nothing of this book (just bought it on a whim and because the author was plugging it on FB), but I have to admit this is a really fun read, and I am enjoying myself.

I was totally sold on this right after some giant acorn ants (Temonthorax) made their appearance.

So far, this really is not bad.


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#9 Offline Locness - Posted May 8 2024 - 11:48 AM

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If you are into manga, there is quite a bit involving insects, arachnids, etc. Terra Formars is one.

#10 Offline kalimant - Posted May 9 2024 - 8:06 AM

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So I have now started reading the above mentioned  "The Cretaceous Human(ts) Extinction: When the ants took over (by Luis-Oliver St. Pierre)".
It is a time travel / parallel universe horror story about two scientists marooned on a parallel earth after a badly gone wrong portal experiment.
This parallel earth has giant ants that attack and devour everything on sight.
This book is of the genre "horror road trip" where the protagonists have to flee across country to reach safety. Basically like every other zombie story, just with giant man-eating ants instead of zombies.
It is very well paced and pretty well written.
Lots of easter-eggs for ant keepers (the guy who wrote it is member in one of my ant FB groups).
I had expected nothing of this book (just bought it on a whim and because the author was plugging it on FB), but I have to admit this is a really fun read, and I am enjoying myself.

I was totally sold on this right after some giant acorn ants (Temonthorax) made their appearance.

So far, this really is not bad.

 

Thanks for the summary! So was it ever explained how the ants got to be so large? Plus, I assume not all of the ants are devouring everything in sight ;-)


I currently maintain a site dedicated to the hyper-diverse myrmicine genus Pheidole.:

 

PHEIDOLE

 

I also own the Lurker's Guide to Leafcutters Ants

 


#11 Offline kalimant - Posted May 9 2024 - 8:07 AM

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If you are into manga, there is quite a bit involving insects, arachnids, etc. Terra Formars is one.

 

I assume it's this long series.

 

https://www.amazon.c...s/dp/B07JJLRDP6


I currently maintain a site dedicated to the hyper-diverse myrmicine genus Pheidole.:

 

PHEIDOLE

 

I also own the Lurker's Guide to Leafcutters Ants

 


#12 Offline ANTdrew - Posted June 17 2024 - 11:26 AM

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I just started reading this old novel, which is told from the point of view of an Atta colony that sets out from Venezuela to explore North America. It’s superb!
A01-E00-DE-12-D8-4916-AA37-B17-C8-A71-B6
"The ants are a people not strong, yet they prepare their meat in the summer." Prov. 30:25
Keep ordinary ants in extraordinary ways.




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