Ender's Shadow by Orson Scott Card, , 1857239989 Search discount cheap book, Compare Book prices, Find Lowest Price
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Ender's Shadow, cheap new, used books  Ender's Shadow (Shadow Saga)
Author: Orson Scott Card  
ISBN: 1857239989   /   Paperback
Publisher: Orbit   /   2000-08-03
List Price: £7.99
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Editorial Reviews:
Ender's Shadow is being dubbed as a parallel novel to Orson Scott Card's Hugo and Nebula Award-winning book Ender's Game. By "parallel" Card means that Shadow begins and ends at roughly the same time as Game, and it chronicles many of the same events. In fact, the two books tell an almost identical story of brilliant children being trained in the orbiting Battle School to lead humanity's fleets in the final war against alien invaders known as the Buggers. The most brilliant of these young recruits is Ender Wiggin, an unparalleled commander and tactician who can surely defeat the Buggers if only he can overcome his own inner turmoil.

Second among the children is Bean, who becomes Ender's lieutenant despite the fact that he is the smallest and youngest of the Battle School students. Bean is the central character of Shadow, and we pick up his story when he is just a two-year-old starving on the streets of a future Rotterdam that has become a hell on Earth. Bean is unnaturally intelligent for his age, which is the only thing that allows him to escape--though not unscathed--the streets and eventually end up in Battle School. Despite his brilliance, however, Bean is doomed to live his life as an also-ran to the more famous and in many ways more brilliant Ender. Nonetheless, Bean learns things that Ender cannot or will not understand, and it falls to this once pathetic street urchin to carry the weight of a terrible burden that Ender must not be allowed to know.

Although it may seem like Shadow is merely an attempt by Card to cash in on the success of his justly famous Ender's Game, that suspicion will dissipate once you turn the first few pages of this engrossing novel. It's clear that Bean has a story worth telling, and that Card (who started the project with a co-writer but later decided he wanted it all to himself) is driven to tell it. And though much of Ender's Game hinges on a surprise ending that Card fans are likely well acquainted with, Shadow manages to capitalise on that same surprise and even turn the table on readers. In the end it seems a shame that Shadow, like Bean himself, will forever be eclipsed by the myth of Ender, because this is a novel that can easily stand on its own. Luckily for readers, Card has left plenty of room for a sequel, so we may well be seeing more of Bean in the near future. --Craig E. Engler, Amazon.com


Customer Reviews:
Brilliant novel     
I loved "Ender's Game" when I read it as a girl - and then reading "Ender's Shadow" 15 years later, I am amazed at how brilliant it supplements Ender's Game.

It's the same story, but with a very different angle. We follow Bean and learn of his childhood as an urchin in Amsterdam and how he is recruited to Battle School and fight alone, side by side with Ender - against the buggers, Battle School and himself.

Card succeeds in giving a thorough and interesting insight of the "backstage" life of Battle School and the mechanics - and not least of Bean pulling strings and trying to survive and save the world in his own way.
An excellent complimentary book to Enders Game     
The reviews here are decidedly mixed - apparently a book you will either love or hate. Personally, I'm one of the ones who loved it.

It is more or less the story of Ender's Game from Bean's point of view. In terms of a novel unusual approach, and an engrossing read - even though you know the story - I couldn't put the book down.

It's hard not to go on, without giving anything away, so I'll stop there! Very highly recommended from me anyway!
Awful     
If you read this book in isolation from Enders Game (as in having never read it and never intending to read it) then it's probably okay. Not a bad Sci-Fi book with some interesting ideas.

But most people won't read this in isolation. In-fact I doubt that as many as 10% of the people that read this book have not already read Enders Game. And therein lies the problem.

If this book is read after Enders Game then it pretty much ruins that story. Instead of Ender being the lead of the time and the one who can do and see things that no one else can, he becomes a bit of a dullard when put in context with this book. Suddenly his genius is mediocre and the only thing he has is his ability to inspire. Hmmmm.

The worst thing about this book is that clearly OSC decided to go back to the root of his success (his one really excellent book, "Enders Game") and see if he could write more stories surrounding this and some of the other characters. That he wrote the book in such a way as to undermine and ruin the original book is where he has gone wrong. We all realise that speak for the dead was a completely different style of book, and Xenocide / children of the mind were actualy quite poor. What had made Ender an interesting and engaging character in the first book didn't work as an adult.

As the creator of Ender he's obviously entitled to re-write his story. It's just a shame that he did it so badly and ruined the original in doing so.

Very poor OSC. Must try harder.

Uncle Orson's Parallel Novel to "Ender's Game"     
There are very few examples of "parallel novels," and I must confess that when I think of such things it is Tom Stoppard's play "Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead," which parallel's "Hamlet," that first comes to mind. Anne McCaffrey plays around with it to a limited extent in several of her Pern novels and there is a book out about Ahab's wife, but neither of those is trying to do what Orson Scott Card attempts in "Ender's Shadow." It is rare indeed when the original author decides to go back and cover old ground from a new perspective. But then as most of us well know by now, Uncle Orson does not disappoint his legion of readers.

The title character is Bean, who was introduced in the original novel as even younger and smaller than Ender Wiggin when he first arrived at the Battle School. The Bean of "Ender's Shadow" does not conflict with the character as originally presented in "Ender's Game," but certainly there is little to suggest in the first book of the true extent of Bean's abilities. There was the definite notion that Bean was closest to Ender in terms of being the chosen one, but it was a sketchy idea at best. The strength of this book is how Card expands Bean's character, developing the idea that Bean, the production of an illegal genetics experiment, is the main competition for Ender and perhaps the only viable alternative. It becomes clear early on that Bean is smarter than Ender, maybe smarter than anybody else in the world. However, what is in doubt is whether that awesome intelligence is enough to make him the best choice to lead the Earth's forces against the Buggers. Again, as in the entire Ender series, the question of "humanness" comes into play because of the genetic experiment that resulted in Bean's birth. As always, Card wants to explore this issue in terms of actions and behaviors rather than physical forms and structures.

In his forward Card tells us that he wanted to write "Ender's Shadow" so that it would not matter to the reader which of the two parallel works they read first. In the abstract he has certainly succeeded in this regard, but of course they should be read in the "proper" order simply because it is this newer novel that better informs us of what happened in the first rather than the other way around. When Card actually does cover a scene from "Ender's Game" one of the things I really appreciated was how he could give added significance to dialogue from the first novel (the best example of this is Bean's "The gate is down" during the battle at the Bugger's Homeworld). For those who always liked "Ender's Game" as the first and best of the Ender novels, this one is certain to be their next favorite work in the series.

The most honest book I've ever read.     
In this outstandingly entertaining novel Orson Scott Card ingeniously illustrates a world that is physically our own, but much different. Out of a world of confusion and fear quietly rises a symbol of humanity's potential named Ender. Ender is a fantastic example of the unexpecting hero who only wants what he wanted as a child, love.
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