Ender’s Game, by Orson Scott Card

1008 Words3 Pages

Ender’s Game, by Orson Scott Card, is an exceptional novel created by an extremely smart, intuitive, and talented individual. This novel deals with several of societies’ issues and is almost satire, comparable to Mark Twain’s Huckleberry Finn. Some topics that are prominent in Ender’s Game are compassion, humanity, and the relationship between adults and children. These three elements define the main character, Ender, and influence the way he makes decisions and eventually changes the world. The setting of this particular novel is in several places (including Greensboro, N.C., Battle School, and Command School (on Eros, one of Saturn’s Moons)), but takes place somewhere in the future. From context clues, it may take place in as soon as 100-300 years, when humans have learned how to manipulate gravity, make extremely fast computers, permanently colonize almost every planet in the solar system, create reliable virtual reality hardware, and create software so complex that even the software’s designers don’t know what it does. There are many characters in this book, but only a few truly impact the main character. The main character and protagonist of this story is Ender Wiggin. At the beginning of the novel, Ender is 6 years old, but he has the mental capacity of a 15 year old, due to favorable genetics. When a monitoring device is removed from Ender, he gets into a fight with another boy in school named Stilson. Despite being drastically weaker than Stilson, Ender fatally wounds Stilson, but is left unaware that he did so. When asked later by Hyrum Graff, a member of the International Fleet, Ender said that the reason he hurt Stilson so badly was so that Ender wouldn’t only win that fight, but win all future fights, before they even... ... middle of paper ... ...e end of the novel, Ender decides to spend his life trying to find an adequate planet for the Formics to live again. In conclusion, Ender's Game is one of the best books I have ever read. Orson Scott Card's ability tell the story from different characters' at some moments and tell the story from a third person perspective makes for an entertaining read. Ender's Game also highlights the moral and ethical problems and issues associated with using children as military tacticians. Card emphasized the idea that even though they were children, Ender and the other students had very real thoughts and feelings, no different than adults four times their age. The novel is an incredibly lucid read, but still strongly provokes thoughts and ideas in experienced readers. I would strongly encourage everyone I come across that has an interest in Science Fiction to read this novel.

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