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Sunday, January 29, 2012

Ender's Game by Orson Scott Card


I don’t remember reading books like this when I was 10-15. If I would have, I am not sure that I would have understood and appreciated them as much. The lessons in this story are so deep. I can see and understand an adolescent reading Harry Potter or Percy Jackson but Ender’s Game is so heavy, dark and based on the manipulation of Child Soldiers. This is a great book for discussions on “what will we do in order to survive”. Is survival the one common of the Human Species? As a whole do we just want to live? The story addresses the struggles of an unwanted child, but it is based on many social, political and ethical ideas of society. This is a great book overall and the author concentrates on the sacrifices and difficulties of war.

The story takes place in c. 2300AD; Earth is at peace following a devastating nuclear war against an alien race called "buggers". Ender is the third child of a family at a time when having more than two children was not acceptable. Ender was genetically engineered to have superior physical and mental capabilities and at six years old he has been chosen as Earth's final hope against the next war with the buggers. 

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