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 Xenocide, who has the courage to confront the mystery...and the truth.
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Product Details
Author:
Orson Scott Card
Mass Market Paperback:
416 pages
Publisher:
Tor Books
Publication Date:
August 15, 1994
Language:
English
ISBN:
0812550757
Package Length:
6.7 inches
Package Width:
4.2 inches
Package Height:
1.3 inches
Package Weight:
0.35 pounds
Average Customer Rating:
based on 409 reviews
Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review: Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.
Great book Oct 01, 2008 I thought this book was a very good book, It included a good deal of exciting science. It was very well written also the text flowed and was very easy to read. Most of all it was intellectually stimulating as it discussed many complex societal issues and ethical issues with out destroying the story. All in all it is a great work of fiction that is entertaining as well as sofisticated.
Speaker for the Dead Sep 15, 2008 It was an awesome book, Orson Scott Card... definately knows how to keep my attention!!!
2 of 3 found the following review helpful:
Not Card's best Aug 28, 2008 Don't get this if you liked Ender's game and are looking for a sequel. Speaker for the Dead has only one of the same characters - Ender - and he's much older. No one he knew is in this book, and there's little that relates to his past or future.
If that were not enough, I found the book to be subdued and tedious, and somehow off-center. It certainy isn't Card's best at all. The story doesn't have a lot of coherence, and none of the characters are very memorable or admirable at all. Alot of details and features of the story really iritated me.
I think if he wanted to write this story, he should have just presented it as a totally new book. I came to this wanting a sequel to Ender's Game (a masterful and original book) but instead got a book that had nothing to do with Ender's game besides Ender himself appearing in it. I know Speaker for the Dead has a lot of sequels too but a far more interesting line of sequels to follow, if you liked Ender's Game, is Ender's Shadow, followed by Shadow of the Hegemon, Shadow Puppets and Shadow of the Giant, which deal with the story of Ender's Game from Bean's point of view and then the other students of Battle School and what happens back on Earth. Read those instead of Speaker for the Dead.
1 of 1 found the following review helpful:
Interesting premise, disappointing execution Aug 14, 2008 It has been thousands of years since Andrew "Ender" Wiggen fought against the alien buggers when he was just a young boy in battle school. Initiallly thought of as a hero, he is now remembered as a horrible person that wiped out an entire species. Humans populate a hundred worlds but still do not know of any other species with which they inhabit the world - except for on one colony, Luisitania. In this world, there is a species of creature known to humans as the piggies. Scientists on Luisitania are studying the piggies and interacting with them, but under strict law not to impart any human knowledge to them lest it interfere with the natural evolution of their culture.
Tragedy befalls Luisitania when the piggies kill the lead scientist. One of his apprentices makes a call for a Speaker for the Dead. The Speakers have the authority to travel to a world where a human has died and speak the deceased's life so that all may know the truth of their life. The Speaker that answers this call? None other than Ender himself. He, along with his sister Valentine, has spent his adult life traveling from world to world at light speed so that although the worlds have aged thousands of years, he is only in his thirties. He realizes that it is time for him to find a place to settle down and live out the rest of his existance and this particular world seems to call to him more so than any other has previously. What Ender may not realize is that the interaction between the humans and the piggies is remarkably similar to previous interactions with the buggers and humankind is not ready to coexist with an alien species. Ender must use his amazing abilities of persuasion to try to save both humans and alien lifeforms.
Ender's Game was one of the best books I have ever read. I looked forward to this one with eager anticipation. It was somewhat disappointing. The story moved very slowly and did not have any of the action or drama of the first in the series. This installment was much more moral and philosophical. While still interesting, it was a very different type of book as a result. I appreciate the book more now that I have finished it and can contemplate the theories that were put forth, but during the reading of the book I longed for the action packed adventure of the first one. Read this one for the human emotional and moral dilemmas posed and not for war games and blistering paced adventure.
1 of 8 found the following review helpful:
There are other better options Aug 04, 2008 I've read a lot of Orson Scott Card's books, and have always found myself coming away from them a little frustrated. The ideas always seem to be interesting, but end up getting lost in mediocre storytelling. Card dwells on the same unique ideas so persistently, going back to the same well so often, that by the end of the book what I had originally found unique now just seems hackneyed. And now that I've found out Card is so outspoken politically with such (literally) fascist and discriminatory views, I don't even want his books in my house. I've sold them online and donated the money to a worthy charity.
If you find Card's story ideas at all interesting, I'd suggest the following authors for a more satisfying storytelling experience:
Neil Gaiman. Gaiman has the same unique flavor to his ideas, but he also has the execution to deliver an incredible story as well. His work is more on the fantasy side, like Card's Alvin Maker series. The only problem is that Gaiman writes so few books that I find myself becoming incredibly impatient waiting for his next story to come out.
Stephen Baxter and Isaac Asimov. Asimov's works can sometimes be a little less accessible then Card's, but Baxter's are not; they are just as easy a read. Both men are visionaries scientifically, and tell gripping, page turning stories. Both are sci-fi based, like Card's Ender Series.
Stephen King. Most people groan when I say how much I love King's writing, but universally I come to find out that those people have never read his Dark Tower series, just his horror. The seven books that comprise the Dark Tower story, widely considered King's Magnum Opus, are a truly unique blend of equal parts fantasy, sci-fi, and western. Note these are not in any way like King's horror writings, though once you've read the Dark Tower you'll see characters from it turn up in ancillary roles in many of his other books. The Dark Tower, like the Alvin series, is set is a world that is kind of our world, kind of not. The Dark Tower series is hands-down the best series I've ever read. Period.
I hope this helps some readers find some great stories they may have otherwise not found. Happy reading!
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