Difference between revisions of "Ender's Game"

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This book was required reading for [[The Critical Essay: Science Fiction]] in 06.2.
 
This book was required reading for [[The Critical Essay: Science Fiction]] in 06.2.
  
There is a movie based on ''Ender's Game'' planned for release on November 1, 2013, with Asa Butterfield playing the role of Ender.
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There is a movie based on ''Ender's Game'' that was released on November 1, 2013 with Asa Butterfield playing Ender
  
 
==External Links==
 
==External Links==

Latest revision as of 13:59, 4 June 2016

Ender's Game was originally a short story by Orson Scott Card. He later fleshed it out into a full-length novel and followed it up with a number of sequels: Speaker for the Dead, Children of the Mind, Xenocide, Ender's Shadow, Shadow of the Hegemon, Shadow Puppets, and Shadow of the Giant. It is the original Ender's Game novel that has the most enduring popularity at CTY, though the sequels are also generally appreciated.

Ender's Game tells the story of Ender Wiggin, an extremely precocious five-year-old, who is trained by the World's government to become a military leader in the war against a dangerous alien threat, the buggers. Ender meets all expectations and, at about the age of ten, he leads Earth's forces against the buggers, only to be confronted with the realization that the battle he fought might not have been his.

The book is one of the things we like, probably because it depicts a host of young geniuses who, as a result of their intelligence, feel out of place in society. The Battle School might be considered an analogue of CTY, raising important ethical and social questions about the nature of the people who emerge from the CTY program. To CTYers, in short, Ender's battle is our battle.

It is also worth noting that Ender grew up into a rather sick, twisted, miserable adult, known by the entire world as the hated xenocide. NOT a happy ending, and hopefully not prophecy for the rest of us.

But Ender truly did achieve a great victory, and in being finally given a challenge worth fighting, he grew up into an adult. Ender's struggles after battling the Buggers show that he has evolved from a child's black and white view of the world to a far more gray-shaded understanding. We might mourn the premature loss of Ender's innocence, but CTYers know what it's like to lose your innocence early, and the resulting struggle has its rewards as well as its downside.

This book was required reading for The Critical Essay: Science Fiction in 06.2.

There is a movie based on Ender's Game that was released on November 1, 2013 with Asa Butterfield playing Ender

External Links