BooksOfTheMoon

Speaker for the Dead (Ender’s Saga, #2)

By Orson Scott Card

Rating: 4 stars

Three thousand years have passed since Ender Wiggins committed unwitting xenocide in Ender’s Game, but thanks to relativistic interstellar travel, both he and his sister Valentine remain young, as they search for somewhere to release the last of the alien ‘bugger’ hive queen. On the colony world of Lusitania another alien species has been found, this time in a primitive state. To prevent another xenocide, the Hundred Worlds Starways Congress enacts a law much like the Prime Directive forbidding interference in the culture of the new species, colloquially known as ‘piggies’. However, despite this, the colony’s xenobiologist still dies, vivisected by the piggies. Ender, now a Speaker for the Dead, is called to speak his death. Twenty years pass before he is able to arrive (only a few weeks for him) and he finds a colony full of pain and secrets. It’s up to him and the hidden AI sentience known as Jane to try and prevent another xenocide.

Although it’s been a very long time since I’ve read Ender’s Game, this feels like a very different book. It’s a talky book, with a very interesting alien ecosystem at its heart. I was frustrated at by the lack of information about that for most of the length of the novel, as just asking some basic questions would have resolved matters. Regarding that, Ender’s explanation of the motives behind the ‘prime directive’ law makes an awful lot of sense and I can understand it in that context.

I found this a very humanistic and compassionate book. As Ender digs into the life of the man he’s come to Speak, he finds many secrets and buried pain, but he excises it like a surgeon, skilfully and without malice. I appreciate that writer and book are different things, but I can’t really match the writer of Speaker for the Dead with Card’s politics and other views. I prefer the Card who wrote this book.

Although there are unresolved plot threads left hanging at the end of this book, there is closure, so I don’t feel the need to read the sequel. This is perfectly readable as a standalone book (although I’d still read Ender’s Game first to understand the character of Ender better).

Book details

ISBN: 9781857238570
Publisher: Orbit
Year of publication: 1986

Hot Sleep (Worthing, #2)

By Orson Scott Card

Rating: 4 stars

Jason Worthing is one of the greatest starship pilots in the fleet. He is also a telepath, something forbidden under imperial law. When a rebellion against the empire goes wrong, the rebels are forced to become colonists to the furthest colony ever established by mankind – and the colony is to be led by Worthing!

I really enjoyed this book. Although Worthing is nominally the title character, we rarely see anything from his point of view. We see things from the point of view of those around him and see what he does being reflected in them. The book also suddenly turns upside down with a twist half way through that I certainly wasn’t expecting which changes the tone completely.

Very readable and a great adventure. I may not agree with Card’s philosophy and politics but he still writes a cracking yarn.

Book details

ISBN: 9780441343454
Publisher: Ace
Year of publication: 1979

Ender’s Game (Ender’s Saga, #1)

By Orson Scott Card

Rating: 4 stars

Humanity is gearing up for the final war against the insectoid invaders. They need a genius to command them, so they search the world’s kindergarten schools for someone they can mould to be the one they need.

This wasn’t a hugely complex book but it was an enjoyable one. Card’s world-building was good (although somewhat dated, since one of the power-blocks was the Soviet empire) and his protagonist may have been young, but he was sympathetic.

Book details

ISBN: 9781857237207
Publisher: Orbit
Year of publication: 1985

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