Ender's Game (Ender's Game series, Book 1)
by Orson Scott Cardpublished
January 1986
(first published 1985)
by Tor Books
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binding
Mass Market Paperback
literary awards
Hugo Award for Best Novel (1986); Nebula Award for Best Novel (1986)
isbn
0812513495
(isbn13: 9780812513493)
description
Ender Wiggin is a very bright young boy with a powerful skill. One of a group of children bred to be military geniuses and save Earth from an inevitab...more
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 32283)
bookshelves:
2008,
sci-fi
Read in May, 2008
I rarely really enjoy reading science fiction (the movies are another matter), but - most likely because of the refreshingly unpretentious and clear prose, which did take me by surprise - this book was almost a joy to read. I say "almost" purely because it's still science fiction, and for many reasons that are too long-winded to go into here, I prefer fantasy.
It's nice, though, to have Card (in his 1991 introduction) refer to this clarity of style, and actually encourage his reader...more
It's nice, though, to have Card (in his 1991 introduction) refer to this clarity of style, and actually encourage his reader...more
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bookshelves:
fantasy-sci-fi,
guy-lit
Read in July, 2008
recommends it for:
book club
Science fiction is not my thing. So it was with some trepidation that I opened my book club choice for the month, ready to endure another Stars Wars inspired knock off. And most of the book I had my head set on 3 stars, writing my review in the back of my mind: sure the story was interesting because it's about the psychology of child manipulation but the battle games lost me, both in interest and sometimes even understanding. It's sci fi. I liked the filler but not the meat. But then I finished ...more
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bookshelves:
readinglist2--sf,
science-fiction-and-fantasy
Read in August, 2008
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Read in January, 2007
Spoiler Alert***
God damn did I hate Ender’s Game. I checked out Amazon and can surely see why I wanted to give it a shot. Talk about a cult following of people absolutely smitten with it. I even read some where that it’s on the required reading list at Quantico. I suppose this book could be some kind of manifesto for misfit nerds who waste their life playing video games or a source of legitimacy for motivating tired Marines sick of drilling (The book rambles on infinitely about the boy g...more
God damn did I hate Ender’s Game. I checked out Amazon and can surely see why I wanted to give it a shot. Talk about a cult following of people absolutely smitten with it. I even read some where that it’s on the required reading list at Quantico. I suppose this book could be some kind of manifesto for misfit nerds who waste their life playing video games or a source of legitimacy for motivating tired Marines sick of drilling (The book rambles on infinitely about the boy g...more
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Read in January, 2008
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(7 people liked it)
2 comments
This book is mainly about a 6 year old boy named Ender Wiggin who is a third child in his family. In this book if your a third your really not wanted and people make fun of you.Familys are really only supposed to have two kids but the goverment let Ender's Parents have him. Ender has 1 brother and 1 sister both older than him. His brother Peter hated him because he had his monitor on for longer and because he was very smart and the goverment watched over him more. He always treated Ende...more
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bookshelves:
film,
modern-fiction,
north-american,
psychological-drama,
science-fiction
Read in June, 2002
Every now and then you come across a book whose prose is thoroughly unimpressive but whose premise and sheer bravado manage to suck you in nonetheless, to the point where you end up enjoying it an awful lot. Ender's Game falls into that category for me. The first few chapters feature some of the choppiest prose I've come across in a published book -- sentences so short and dull that I seriously wondered how the book had ever got published. However, the writing gradually gets better, and a...more
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bookshelves:
awful,
sci-fi
First of all: Don't read the introduction. Please, God. It'll put you off the book for sure.
First he feels it necessary to rant about Fantasy and how derivative it is compared to Science Fiction *angelic chorus*.
THEN he barely conceals his self-congratulation on having written a 'clear' book and goes on for quite some time about people who build their careers on books too abstruse for the public to understand. Ummm, issues much? Because I don't know of anyone with a truly successful caree...more
First he feels it necessary to rant about Fantasy and how derivative it is compared to Science Fiction *angelic chorus*.
THEN he barely conceals his self-congratulation on having written a 'clear' book and goes on for quite some time about people who build their careers on books too abstruse for the public to understand. Ummm, issues much? Because I don't know of anyone with a truly successful caree...more
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Read in September, 2008
I decided to read this book because I’d been meaning to for quite a while. I heard it was good from many sources, and wanted to find out for myself.
Ender’s Game is a science fiction story set in some period in the future. It follows the life of a, extremely intelligent 6 year old boy named Ender Wiggin who is selected to go to a training facility known as Battle School. In this space station, young boys and occasionally girls are taken to prepare for the oncoming Third Inva...more
Ender’s Game is a science fiction story set in some period in the future. It follows the life of a, extremely intelligent 6 year old boy named Ender Wiggin who is selected to go to a training facility known as Battle School. In this space station, young boys and occasionally girls are taken to prepare for the oncoming Third Inva...more
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recommends it for:
everyone -- i'll even buy you a copy!
i think 'ender's game' is the only book i've read three times. for me books often don't have repeat reading value in the same way some movies have repeat viewing value. it's probably because a movie takes two hours of your time while a novel, for me, takes a week or longer. so for someone like to me read a novel twice, not to mention three times, is really saying something [and yes, i realize the inherent snobbery in that statement:].
i've thought long and hard about what makes 'ender's gam...more
i've thought long and hard about what makes 'ender's gam...more
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bookshelves:
books-used-in-school,
yalitapproximately
Read in June, 2008
recommends it for:
folks curious about sci-fi
This is the assigned summer reading for a few of my upcoming high school classes--I probably would have never read it otherwise. I have always been reluctant when it comes to science fiction: for good or ill, I always made judgments that it all follows the same formula--it's always two extremes fighting the war of the worlds; even ordinary people are extraordinary; and aliens, aliens, aliens (as much of a fan of sci-fi TV & movies I was as a pre-teen, few depictions turn me off more now tha...more
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Read in May, 2005
A really great book about Ender Wiggins, who is taken at the age of six to live in a military training institute where he is trained to be a great commander. He rises much more quickly than the average child because he is being groomed to be the commander of the entire international fleet against the buggers (what a horrible name Card picked for his aliens!). In the end he thinks he is still training but he’s really fighting the battle, and he destroys the entire bugger race. I kept thinking a...more
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bookshelves:
novel,
sci-fi
Read in October, 1998
I was savaged by a miniature poodle the other day--wait--no. Someone protested my review of The Giver the other day, and amongst a lot of Ad Hominem attacks, made the argument that children needed great books dumbed-down for them, and that The Giver is just an effective dumbing-down of 1984, Fahrenheit 451, Brave New World; what ...more



























