Speaker for the Dead
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Why did I read this
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Rooster Teeth #1 Fan
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rated it 1 star
Oct 20, 2014 03:23PM

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Thats what I did with Enders Game... and I loved It. Thanks for the sugest. Going to library on Wednsday anywaay so why not!

Dude, this book and the following ones are so amazing. I don't get why u had/have that reaction >_>'






Speaker and Xenocide are unrelated novels, and Card unabashedly stuffed Ender in as the protagonist to help with sales. Otherwise, it's completely unrelated. And to prove the point, he also added a scene at the end--the END--with the alien egg. Bunch of baloney as my mom used to say.

Enders Game is a prequel rather than the first book in the series. OSC has said that he was writing this book first but needed to explain the back story so he came up with Enders Game

It's a really poor way to start a series, if you think about it. Card really wanted to write this great (in his eyes) book, but for people to understand it, he had to write a mediocre (in his eyes) book to explain how it came to be. It's almost hilarious (okay, it is hilarious) how the scheme blew up in his face, because Ender's Game is loved by more people than Speaker for the Dead.

It doesnt have to be published for it to be a prequel the story already existed it just hadnt been released
Speaker for the Dead is the better book in my opinion so i dont think it was that much of blow up. People would like Enders game more as it was more accessible than Speakerfor the Dead

I agree with this pretty strongly. I liked Ender's Game, but I'd honestly have rated speaker for the dead a half star above it if I could. It's just different, not bad. If you are looking for a clever action story with a protagonist that starts as an underdog and against all odds uses his wits to win through to the end, Ender's game is for you, Speaker for the Dead is more about culture clash and philosophy and shit like that. No worse. Just different.

Yes actually it does have to be published or it isn't a prequel. It would be the first in the series.


Actually where does it state that? The dictionary definition merely states an existing work it did exsist it just wasnt published

I don't know what dictionary you're using, but I prefer Merriam-Webster.
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictio...
"A movie, book, etc., that tells the part of a story that happened before the story in another movie, book, etc."
The definition clearly states "before the story in another...book", thus, an unfinished, unpublished idea does not count towards making Ender's Game a prequel to something.

How can you have a prequel if the original book does not exist? C'mon this is just common sense. but, since you asked:
http://www.merriam-webster.com/
pre·quel
noun \ˈprē-kwəl\
: a movie, book, etc., that tells the part of a story that happened before the story in another movie, book, etc.
Full Definition of PREQUEL
: a work (as a novel or a play) whose story precedes that of an earlier work
See prequel defined for English-language learners »
Examples of PREQUEL
His next film will be a prequel to last year's hit movie.
Origin of PREQUEL
pre- + -quel (as in sequel)
First Known Use: 1972


So, if you liked Ender's Game, and want to read more in that vein, try reading Ender's Shadow (also by Orson Scott Card). It tells the story of the same events but from the perspective of one of the other battle school students. I don't want to give anything away, but it opens up the world of Ender's Game in really fascinating ways.


Hyperbole and YELLING in book reviews is just plain boring... trying saying something useful.
And I enjoyed the series very much especially as it got More philosophical.

Card wrote them as one story (Speaker, xenocide, children). The books became too long because he had so much to tell.
I like these even better than Enders game. And they are far better than the Shadow series. If you like Action and James Bond, stick with Shadow-series.







Xenocide, I hated that it felt like struggling against everything was pointless, it was inevitably doomed. And I really didn't like most of the characters. Maybe the next book changes that but I really hate when books do that

Didn't dislike the human characters as much as I remember doing but they were still annoying in Xenocide. More than strange to have the children who are now 30-40 to still argue like children. I was far more interested in the events on Path and what the Hive Queen and Piggies were up to.

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