Speaker for the Dead (Ender's Saga, #2)
In the aftermath of his terrible war, Ender Wiggin disappeared, and a powerful voice arose: The Speaker for the Dead, who told the true story of the Bugger War.
Now, long years later, a second alien race has been discovered, but again the aliens' ways are strange and frightening...again, humans die. And it is only the Speaker for the Dead, who is also Ender Wiggin the ...more
Hardcover, 432 pages
Published
August 15th 1991
by Tor Books
(first published March 1986)
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While Ender's Game is a solid piece of modern sci fi, the sequel falls all too short. 'Speaker' is preachy and allegorical, and the characters often devolve into simple mouthpieces for the author's opinions, which are numerous, long, and not particularly original.
While I do respect that every author has his own point of view, and that one should be able to glean some understanding from their books, such a heavy-handed case detracts from the story and characters as a whole. The suspen...more
While I do respect that every author has his own point of view, and that one should be able to glean some understanding from their books, such a heavy-handed case detracts from the story and characters as a whole. The suspen...more
Lacey Louwagie
rated it
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
sociology / anthropology types
Orson Scott Card has said that Speaker for the Dead is the book he always "meant to write" and that the only reason he wrote Ender's Game was as a "prequel," so he felt a little baffled when Ender's Game ended up becoming his most famous and most read work. After reading Speaker for the Dead, I understand where he's coming from. The complexity of issues tackled in Speaker for the Dead are much deeper than those in Ender; likewise, the cultures and worlds explored through Spea...more
My favorite book of all time, if only because it brings back sentimental memories. More than simply a sci-fi page turner, it deals with non-trivial matters such as guilt and love. In a whole different league than the rest of the Ender series, not to mention the rest of Scott Card's works. A must read for anyone who was ever interested in sci-fi.
Speaker for the Dead is my favorite of the Ender books. It has a different tone from Ender's Game, with less action-adventure. I have read most of the Ender books (I may have missed one in the Shadow sequence) and Speaker for the Dead is the most emotionally mature and psychologically sophisticated of the bunch. Though it still uses SF conventions and symbols tell its story, it's really about memory, loss, grief, and making meaning out of these experiences. These are also connected to finding on...more
Card is wrong when he tells his readers that Speaker is a better book than Ender's Game. He says young readers don't like it as well because it doesn't feature kids. I don't like it as well as Ender's game because while Ender's game is a psychological epic, with all the heartfelt intensity of a writer's first real story, Speaker reads to me like just another science fiction novel. Some aliens, a superintelligent virus; snooooozer. Well depicted snoozer, but still. Ender spends his whole lif...more
Blah. After Ender's Game, I was all excited to read this one, and it . . . was pretty boring. It wasn't TERRIBLE -- I finished it, but it was mostly boring.
The only really interesting things about it were a) biological concepts that are totally different from what we have here on earth, which, after watching a lot of "forehead aliens" on Star Trek is a nice change, and b) the impact of the whole you-don't-age-when-you're-travelling-close-to-the-speed-of-light thing (i.e....more
The only really interesting things about it were a) biological concepts that are totally different from what we have here on earth, which, after watching a lot of "forehead aliens" on Star Trek is a nice change, and b) the impact of the whole you-don't-age-when-you're-travelling-close-to-the-speed-of-light thing (i.e....more
When I first read this book I was in middle school and I hated it. It was such a disappointment as a follow up to the brilliance of Ender's Game. I re-read it when in grad school, and it was an entirely different experience.
The book has elements of mystery, religion/mysticism, anthropology (albeit fictional anthropology), philosophy, politics, and intrigue. But its got a very slow start, and there isn't much in the way of action - its all about two cultures trying to understand...more
The book has elements of mystery, religion/mysticism, anthropology (albeit fictional anthropology), philosophy, politics, and intrigue. But its got a very slow start, and there isn't much in the way of action - its all about two cultures trying to understand...more
Just as good as - possibly better than - Ender's Game, although not at all similar to it.
A grown ups' book, a literary science fiction that has a lot of the Big Questions, by the end answered by Ender the best he can by his understanding of what's needed. Perhaps not satisfying for those who want a comic book hero but instead the kind of hero that has more living man as part of his character than a storybook person. He wants to be a husband, father, and someone who is building a home, not a military genius, not an adventurer, explorer or even a businessman. The title and job he take...more
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UGGHHH! I figured since some of my all-time favorite books are Ender's Game and Ender's Shadow, that Speaker for the Dead - another installment of Ender's life - was going knock my socks off too...I was SO disappointed. This book won the Hugo and Nebula awards - and one critic even said this was Card's best work. I have to assume that they weren't reading the same novel I was. They just couldn't have been. It was awful. This book was such a let down, I wish I never would have read it. It c...more
Made me question what I thought I liked about Ender's Game. Like a Dan Brown book, it manipulates you into reading onwards in order to find out what the hell was going on in the first chapters -- even as you suspect more and more strongly that it's not going to be worth it in the end. Hokey space soap opera.
What's a hero to do once he's accomplished his heroic deed? Ender doesn't quite know--and unfortunately, Card doesn't quite seem to know either. Ender decays into something of a pathetic and self-pitying figure who wanders about uttering platitudes and aphorisms. It's Card at his preachiest, and thus at his worst.
Calling this book the sequel to Ender's Game is like calling Mary Poppins the sequel to Star Wars. It's boring, overly observational, and totally unrelated in style and setting to Ender's Game.
I didn’t find this as enjoyable as Enders Game. While it deals with a lot of issues that I usually enjoy in a story (religion, technology, sociology), I felt like the story took a back seat to the writers agenda. It is still a well written book as far as I’m concerned, however, and if I had not read Enders Game first, I probably would have rated it higher. It’s amazing how the controversies that Orson Scott Card raises in this series are still relevant today. My husband listened to the book as w...more
In an amazing movie or show, sometimes, it makes us silent and open mouthed in astonishment and explode all the praises until we have calmed and the hype have been subsided. In relation with this book, I would not have made a review of this book due to the same reason I mentioned above. Even if I have calmed, I didn’t think of reviewing this book because I rather think and dream the story instead. Thanks to my reading buddy Kwesi for asking me million of questions. Read his review.
En...more
En...more
I’m currently reading Characters & Viewpoints by Orson Scott Card, it’s a book about writing and so far I like it and agree with the things he is saying. But it’s really funny because before starting Speaker for the Dead I read something in his Characters book that said that every author has to answer three questions every reader asks automatically, and the author has to do it within the first 2 or 3 pages of his book or the reader will naturally lose interest in the book. The three questions ...more
I can understand why this book might not enthrall all of its readers but for me, it was brilliant. The anthropological framework certainly entertained me and the deeper themes hooked me.
The concept of a Speaker for the Dead and the healing properties of truth make the book a self-searching read. Perhaps the book does not glorify the catholic concept of confession, but it certainly values repentance and forgiveness while acknowledging the absurdity of the act of forgiveness. Above all, i...more
The concept of a Speaker for the Dead and the healing properties of truth make the book a self-searching read. Perhaps the book does not glorify the catholic concept of confession, but it certainly values repentance and forgiveness while acknowledging the absurdity of the act of forgiveness. Above all, i...more
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After reading and thoroughly loving "Ender's Game", I had really high expectations for its sequel, "Speaker for the Dead." Especially after I read that this was the book the author always wanted to write--apparently "Ender" was conceived as an elaborate "preface" to this, the real story. With all that buildup, I was slightly underwhelmed by "Speaker" Not disappointed per se, but not nearly as blown away as I was by the first book in the series...more
Ender's Game is a classic sci-fi book to which this is a disappointing sequel.
Card's gift as an author is in his storytelling and his bend for the magical/fantastic. In Ender's Game, Enchantment and a few of his other works, we are drawn into a different universe and captured by the drama that unfolds around us. However, Card uses Speaker for the Dead, Xenocide and the Homecoming series as a soap box for his moral values. While there are certainly worse role models out there (an...more
Card's gift as an author is in his storytelling and his bend for the magical/fantastic. In Ender's Game, Enchantment and a few of his other works, we are drawn into a different universe and captured by the drama that unfolds around us. However, Card uses Speaker for the Dead, Xenocide and the Homecoming series as a soap box for his moral values. While there are certainly worse role models out there (an...more
I mean, its interesting how he sets up his plots with time : Characters use light speed to bump around, and while for people on planets time ages 50 years, the people on the ship don't age more then a couple of days. THIS I like.
But I'm sick of his subtle racism; I'm a bit sick of how Card pretends to be able to view people like an open book - his characters can PREDICT exactly how other characters will act, due to their personality type etc.
And we'll see if the plot has ...more
But I'm sick of his subtle racism; I'm a bit sick of how Card pretends to be able to view people like an open book - his characters can PREDICT exactly how other characters will act, due to their personality type etc.
And we'll see if the plot has ...more
It was nice to see Ender all grown-up and dealing with a universe he helped to create and his status in it.
Hundreds of years have passed since Ender defeated the Buggers and destroyed their homeworld. Where once he was regarded as humanity's saviour, now he is seen as history's greatest monster. Killing the Buggers is now referred to as the Xenocide.
Thankfully for Ender, most people assume he died off long ago, and aren't aware he has lived for centuries because of the r...more
Hundreds of years have passed since Ender defeated the Buggers and destroyed their homeworld. Where once he was regarded as humanity's saviour, now he is seen as history's greatest monster. Killing the Buggers is now referred to as the Xenocide.
Thankfully for Ender, most people assume he died off long ago, and aren't aware he has lived for centuries because of the r...more
Finished the book! Very, very good, but I still think Ender's Game was better. Speaker for the Dead was definitely more cerebral and philosophical than Ender's game, but I simply found Ender Wiggan to be more interesting in the first book. I enjoyed reading his exploits at Battle School and found them to be engaging than what happened here. That being said, I still really liked it, and the concept of inter-species relationships were very thought provoking.
Wow, this was a fascinating read. It's a different feel from Ender's Game, less action, more focus on the people, the relationships, and the ethics of the situation. It's been 3,000 years since the Buggers were destroyed. Instead of being viewed as a savior, Ender is viewed as an atrocity, the genocide of another race. Because of the time differential from space travel, Ender is only about 35 years old. He is known as Andrew Wiggin, Speaker for the Dead. Another race has been discovered. ...more
Ender's Game rocked my world when I read it about 15 years ago, and back then I hadn't realized that there were other books to follow. I happened across Ender's Shadow a few years back, which is basically Ender's Game told from a different perspective, and really enjoyed it. I stumbled across this title recently and hastened to read it without the benefit of re-reading Ender's Game to refresh my memory.
In retrospect, I should have re-read Ender's Game first, and I'll definitely do so once ...more
In retrospect, I should have re-read Ender's Game first, and I'll definitely do so once ...more
In his introduction to Speaker for the Dead, Orson Scott Card explains that most protagonists are adolescents (or in an adolescent stage of social development) because adolescent characters are unfettered by the responsibilities that would prevent more mature characters from going on novel-worthy adventures. But in this story, Card chronicles Ender's transition from unencumbered, transient loner to responsible family man. As a reader who is often frustrated by a lack of mature adults (both in li...more
An excellent sequel and fascinating story: This was a fascinating, generational story of life on Lusitania, where humans have come into contact with the second sentient beings--the piggies--since the xenocide of the buggers in Ender's Game. Feeling guilty, the Starways Congress decides to allow xenologers to study these aliens and live among the Catholic colony on Lusitania. When two xenologers die at the hands of the piggies, the old calls for war ring again but instead of an armada, the Speake...more
A very impressive, but very different sequel to the much loved Ender's Game. Very different in the fact there is very little action compared to Ender's Game, but rather the story is exciting simply through its compelling plot. Though the book was written to stand alone with out Ender's Game I would suggest reading Ender's Game first, if for nothing else than a better understanding of Ender's origin. What I loved most about this book was its exploration of the difficulty of effectively managing a...more
19: "And I remind you of her?"
"I was thinking that she would have been nothing at all like you."
Novinha, Pino
28: "Eventually it would occur to them to explore stable and socially acceptable reproductive strategies." -Narrator
140: "...Every one of her six children reminded him that his wife was sleeping with another man. It was probably part of their bargain in the beginning that she would not be faithful to him. But six ...more
"I was thinking that she would have been nothing at all like you."
Novinha, Pino
28: "Eventually it would occur to them to explore stable and socially acceptable reproductive strategies." -Narrator
140: "...Every one of her six children reminded him that his wife was sleeping with another man. It was probably part of their bargain in the beginning that she would not be faithful to him. But six ...more
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| Mrs. Fabsik's 6th...: Speaker for The Dead | 92 | 5 | Jan 15, 2012 04:59pm |
Orson Scott Card is the author of the novels Ender's Game, Ender's Shadow, and Speaker for the Dead, which are widely read by adults and younger readers, and are increasingly used in schools.
Besides these and other science fiction novels, Card writes contemporary fantasy (Magic Street, Enchantment, Lost Boys), biblical novels (Stone Tables, Rachel and Leah), the American frontier fantasy ser...more
More about Orson Scott Card...
Besides these and other science fiction novels, Card writes contemporary fantasy (Magic Street, Enchantment, Lost Boys), biblical novels (Stone Tables, Rachel and Leah), the American frontier fantasy ser...more
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“This is how humans are: We question all our beliefs, except for the ones that we really believe in, and those we never think to question."
- Andrew Wiggin”
—
261 people liked it
- Andrew Wiggin”
“No human being, when you understand his desires, is worthless. No one's life is nothing. Even the most evil of men and women, if you understand their hearts, had some generous act that redeems them, at least a little, from their sins.”
—
159 people liked it
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Aug 15, 2011 10:55am
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