My annual post predicting breakout players for the upcoming season is up for Insiders.
I read – more precisely, listened to – Orson Scott Card’s Hugo-winning novel Ender’s Game back in 2006, before this blog existed, and somehow have only referred to it once in all of the posts on science fiction I’ve had on the site since then. I thought it was fine, certainly entertaining, with an ending that felt tacked-on (because it was), a good young adult sci-fi novel that followed a fairly typical storyline of “outcast kid saves humanity” but that ended somewhere unsupported by the story that came before. I just read the book’s sequel, Speaker for the Dead, which won the Hugo the following year and takes that tacked-on ending and blows it up into a full-length novel in its own right. It holds together much better than its predecessor, and this time around Card manages to create a few more well-rounded characters, but Ender has become a little bit insufferable, Card’s admirable philosophy comes across in ham-handed style, and if anything this book feels even more like it’s written for a teenaged audience.
Ender, born Andrew Wiggin, has become the Speaker for the Dead after defeating the “buggers” in a war that he learned never needed to take place at all. He now travels through portions of space inhabited by humans delivering funeral orations that attempt to sum up each deceased person’s life in full, rather than, say, delivering the sort of encomia we expect when someone dies but that fail to do the subject justice. Because of the relativistic effects of faster-than-light travel, however, he arrives at planets years or even decades after his services have been requested, which allows much of the action of Speaker for the Dead to take place in his absence.
In this book, humanity has encountered another sentient species, called “piggies” due to their porcine facial appearance, on the Portuguese Catholic-controlled planet of Lusitania. The human scientists on the planet observe the piggies, more formally called pequeninos, and operate under fairly strict rules on non-interference, including avoiding exposing the piggies to any human technology so they don’t accelerate the latter species’ evolution in any artificial way. A plague wiped out much of the earliest human settlement, and Novinha, the daughter of the two scientists who found a cure but still died of the disease, calls for Ender to Speak for the scientist who raised her but was killed by the piggies in some sort of religious ritual after he discovered the secret of the plague’s place in the planet’s ecosystem. By the time Ender arrives, however, twenty more years have passed, Novinha’s former lover (the dead scientist’s son) has also died in a similar ritual, while her son and her former lover’s daughter have fallen in love while also studying the piggies. Ender walks into this quagmire just as the all-powerful “Congress” prepares to sanction the humans on Lusitania for illegally sharing technology with the piggies.
Speaker for the Dead swept the big three sci-fi awards (Hugo, Nebula, Locus) in 1987, beating out, among others, Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale and William Gibson’s Count Zero (the sequel to Neuromancer; my only review of a Gibson novel is of the third book in the trilogy, Mona Lisa Overdrive), which I can only assume from this vantage point was in response to its popularity. Card is offering a sort of pop philosophy in this book about tolerance and understanding – at odds with his longstanding opposition to gay rights – of other cultures and religious traditions, one that is admirable even if he does beat you over the head with that particular hammer. Ender was a regular if precocious kid in the first novel, going through the same kind of boarding-school experience that would later show up in Harry Potter and the Magicians series, but here he’s like a new Dalai Lama with a bit of an ego. (I suppose when multiple planets know your name and you’ve founded a new religion, you probably get a bit of a big head about it all.)
The big advantage of this book compared to Ender’s Game is that Card seems to have learned how to create compelling characters, even complex, difficult ones. Novinha is fascinating, even if there was a note about her that sounded off key to me, but one that involves something everyone has a hard time understanding – why women stay in abusive relationships. The kid scientists all have distinct personalities as well, even if they don’t get the page time of the adults, and there’s at least an attempt to distinguish the various named pequenino characters even though they cycle in and out of the story rather quickly.
There’s some graphic violence in this book – the ritual mentioned above would never make it to a theater if someone filmed this story – that is truly at odds with the overall tone. Card writes like he’s talking to a teenager, and as if his characters are all stuck in teenage modes of expression. Nicknaming the alien species “buggers” and “piggies” comes across as puerile. He also has a simple idea of atonement or redemption, one that I don’t think fits with the events that come before those moments, as if doing the right thing today wipes out all the wrong things you did before. I wish life worked that way, but it doesn’t.
As a teenager I went through my grandfather’s Analog magazines from the 70’s and the original “Ender’s Game” short story was the best and most memorable I came across. (Possibly my age affected that.)
From your comment I infer that you know the novel was a re-write to set up Speaker, but more was tacked on than the ending. The essence of that story is what happens in Battle/Command School, and that’s all the short story was. Even though I enjoyed Speaker, I felt that each step he took along that series, from the short story on, was a step down in quality.
From reading your other reviews, I’m not at all surprised you don’t feel the same way as I do about this one. I absolutely love it. For me, the redemption aspect really works as a tie-in with Ender’s Game, and I still can’t get over how cool the science fiction aspects of the piggies’ three lives are. My favorite bit of the book right now, and it changes frequently since I re-read it every couple of years, is the discussion with Ella about the mysteries of Lusitania and the Descolada virus.
What titles do you have left before you’ve read the whole list? Are you doing the Retro Hugos as well?
I have four left: Cyteen, A Deepness in the Sky, and the two Mars books.
Current me if I’m wrong, but didn’t you once say you wouldn’t see the film adaptation of Ender’s Game because of Card’s views? If so, why does that not apply to his books, which are much more his than a film adaptation ever would be?
If Keith bought the book used or borrowed it from a library, he’s not contributing financially to Card in any way.
I did borrow it from the library, for my Kindle (love that option). Also, I was close enough to reading all of the Hugos that I wasn’t going to let this one stand in the way. If anything stops me it’ll be the Mars trilogy.
Thanks for answering.
I do actually own the film, but that’s simply because I’m a Harrison Ford completist.
Does Kim Robinson have some bad stuff in his past, or is that just because the books are boring? They are pretty boring.
Definitely don’t read any more in this series–they start to get straight-up racist before too long.
I definitely preferred Speaker to Ender. Loved the Valentine character in this one.
Both still enjoyable, but even after reading most of these myself I am singularly impressed by the 1st 2 Hyperion novels.
I hope you enjoy the 2nd of the series. So well developed even if I did see some parts coming – but no spoilers…
Read these in my more formative years, and loved them. I wonder how theyd’ hold up now? Not that I’m going to re-read them, there are just too many others to read for the first time.
I’m linking to a somewhat notorious review of ender’s game and speaker for the dead here…
http://peachfront.diaryland.com/enderhitlte.html
I participated in OSC’s forums for a while. When you get to know the man a little better, its very easy to start seeing the straight up evil in his books, because you stop placing your own views over his, and start hearing his beliefs a little louder. I haven’t read an OSC book in over a decade, and fully intend never to pick one up again… not only because of his homophobia, but his racism and xenophobia as well.