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Ender's Game (Fantastic Audio)

Ender's Game (Fantastic Audio)

List Price: $40.00
Your Price: $28.00
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Simply one of the best every written!!
Review: 10, 10, 10!!! I am sorry some people took the time to write poor reviews, but I think anyone who enjoys a twist and a great tale will love this as much as I. I walked into a bookstore and saw a note under this book that it was a great read. I passed it by. When I saw it again at another store I bought it. I being a slow reader, finished it in one night (all night) and was so drained from the emotion and timing. It has got to be one of the best stories in SF. I hope you will take the time to read it because it stands out in the Card collection. None of his others have matched this book and few can match it in any book!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Response from a SciFi Author
Review: This review is mostly a response to the negative posts above....please don't ruin the art of the best book yet written by reading this review before you get it.

This book not only brought me into science fiction reading, it brought me into scifi WRITING. This is the pinnacle of character writing, this book is the definition of Pathos.

I've read every review here (took over 1 hour) and I have seen 2 groups of negative comments:

1. This is not hard scifi. I know this. It isn't SUPPOSED to be. I've read a LOT of scifi, and believe me, Card knew what he was doing. He didn't want you to be questioning his suppositions in the science world. He brings in a few concepts to catch your attention but doesn't give you enough to DISTRACT from the flawless tale. Hard core scifi is great stuff...but as a whole I find the characters there shallow, merely a vessel for a new scientific idea. Here the characters are real, powerful, and beautiful.

2. How can a child be so smart: Anyone who can't suspend their belief the little tiny bit that it requires to follow the story line isn't a reader, they are a critic, and not a very good one. Ender is a genius, but he IS a child, or he wouldn't be put in the situation he was in. What the critics are missing here is that Ender LOSES the game, and spends the next 3000 years trying to pay for that loss. His innocence is his downfall. I've known children that are introspective...not all are hyperactive sugar-bombs, some struggle just to gain acceptance in their own family. He was born a "third" you may remember, and was subject to intense scrutiny his entire existence......how would you have behaved as a child? I think you would have grown up in an awful hurry.

Anyway....I am a hard core scifi fan. I've read every book I've ever heard of from Clarke, Niven, Asimov.....these Scifi giants are fabulous and they help us shape our vision of the future.

Card is a storyteller. He doesn't base his books on the science. He bases them on the character. That's how the art works. That's WHY the art works. If you want pure science, pick up an engineering book. Most people read for the thrill of the characters.

Sure, it can be fun to calculate the testile strength of Ringworld <yawn> if you're an engineer....but if you're a human, this is the best book you will EVER read.

Anyone who makes it this far down the review list would be on chapter 7 by now. :) Just go get the book, see for yourself. Or maybe that advanced quantum physics book is more your style. I guarantee you'll love one of them.

PS I've bought ender's game 23 times, and given it away 22 times. When someone asks me why I write SciFi, I give them a copy. Its become a textbook for me now.

If I ever get to meet OSC, I'm going to shake his hand and tell him what an impact he has had on me as a Reader and as a Writer. I'm sure he gets it daily, but when you're that good....well I guess it just goes with the territory.

Long story short......just go buy the book. If you didn't get it, take a deep breath and read it AGAIN. heehe

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Don't bother if you're over 18
Review: I tried reading this juvenile SF novel when it first appeared, and stopped halfway through -- I was put off by the ludicrous subplot, in which the brilliant hero's sweet sister and mean brother (not deep characterization -- they only need one adjective each) use invented Internet alter-egos to take over the world. Billions of people on the Web, and not _one_ has a single idea, except for Ender's siblings. But that's the pattern of the book, a book that makes no attempt to describe the contentiousness or complexities of real life.

Ender, the hero, is no more a character than, say, James Bond -- Ender always wins, always bests every obstacle, defeats every enemy, shames every teacher, with a mininum of effort. Other characters exist only to extol or mirror his greatness; the handful who don't admit to his superiority are easily disposed of. There's an almost pornographic feel to the final chapter, in which Ender founds a new space colony, saves the alien race he thought he had single-handedly destroyed, and invents a new religion(!), all the while wallowing in the self-pity that started at page 2 and never stopped.

I would give this the lowest grade possible but for two factors -- Card is a facile, easy-to-read writer, and the book might do some good to bright pre-teen boys who aren't getting much support from their environment. Of course, "Playboy" might too, but it isn't art either. Not recommended for adults at all.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Next to the Bible, the best book ever written.
Review: Ender's Game by Orson Scott Card combines the best of Science Fiction with a riviting message about the human survival instinct. The book follows Ender, a child genious and an outcast from society, through early childhood and on through the torments of the battle school. He is in a society threatened by an alien race called the 'Buggers'. From the begining of the novel, the reader is made aware that Ender is considered the last hope for humanity.

Card writes the book as though telling a wonderful story of Compassion in the face of complete evil. I feel that this novel should be required reading for anyone who considers himself human. you may find that some of the situations that Ender Wiggen goes through are not all that foriegn and that Card portrays society more accurately than most.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This Book Is More Than Sci-Fi
Review: I've read many of the reviews of Ender's Game, and I think I know what the people who rate it poorly (like a 2 or 3) don't like about the book. It is NOT sci-fi. Sure, it has to catagorized that way. But the setting is incidental to message of the book. I've read the book at least 5 times and I find something new and wonderful each time. The characters Card creates touch you in such a way, that you are sad when the book comes to an end

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: When an innocent comes of age!
Review: When Ender (Andrew) Wiggin accepted General Graff's offer to join the military, he had no idea that he was the best of the best. In some respects, Orson Scott Card had seized the idea of poor boy makes good any avid reader of science-fiction recognizes from the works of Robert Heinlein. But Card has gone one better. Not only has a poor boy made good, but through no fault of his own he is called upon to be the instrument of salvation by his world. The raging undercurrent of this adventure is the question that asks "At what cost is the soul of a little boy?". The revised editon filled in the gaps from the first publication so when you buy this book, and you owe it to yourself to buy this book and read it - read it and think about it. It is when the the last page has been turned that the thinking begins. An excellent read, one that will call the reader back time and again

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Pablum for the slow-witted masses.
Review: Science fiction for those who aren't capable of handling real science fiction. No mind-stretching concepts, no uncomfortable questioning of assumptions, no imagination required. A simple, easy-to-follow plot, written in small, easy-to-understand words. The ending is predictable from early on. Plenty of reassurance for the hard-of-thinking. As a short story, it was a bland attempt at an implausible premise stretched beyond the breaking point. Inflated into a pompous novel, it's a crime

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This book is great
Review: I am ten years old, and I read this book. It may have some swear words, but this book is the best of science fiction. I used to read only star trek. Now, I read others, just because of this book. I did it for a book report at school, so thats how I read it. This book is great. I definetily reccomend it!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I liked this book so much....
Review: -I ran to the store and bought it. -Read it more than twenty times. -Collected the whole series.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Internet reaching maturity is a much neglected subplot
Review: OK, first I have to explain the 9. I'm from the midwest, no one and nothing is a ten. Let's say it's a 9+.

It's been five or more years since I read this great book. After reading it, I immediately went out in search of (and read) its sequels "Speaker For the Dead" and "Xenocide". That in itself is a tribute to my appreciation of this book.

Andrew Wiggin (aka Ender) is (like me) a player of games. He plays games so well, that he becomes the Earth's greatest military genius. But is this a good thing?

Ender's brother and sister are similar to him, but not militarily oriented. They become Earth's greatest POLITICAL genius. (The singular noun here is intentional. Read the book.)

The book focuses on Ender and his exploits in learning to save the human race from extinction at the hands of the alien race known as the buggers, but a critical subplot is what his brother and sister accomplish here on Earth using what the Internet has matured into. Mind you, this book was written before the Internet became a household word.

Ender has been engineered (more or less) to destroy the buggers, but he is still a human, and he must learn to live with what he is. He sees his brother as evil, but the evil in his brother is the good in him.

This book is filled with similar contradictions. In essence, the author paints a picture of humanity and forces the reader to decide whether this is good, or bad. Then, as if that's not enough, he gives the reader a mirror image of that picture, and requires another decision; good or bad?

You decide.

But before you make your final decision, you might want to read the sequels...Speaker for the Dead, and Xenocide.

Enjoy.


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