Category: Books

  • Ender’s Game E-Book on Sale for $3.49

    Ender’s Game E-Book on Sale for $3.49

    Enders-Game-Kindle

    If you don’t already own the Kindle or Nook version of Ender’s Game, the ebook is on sale now for $3.49.

    Although I own a hardcover and a paperback of Ender’s Game, having the ebook version is very handy because it allows you to search the book easily (how else do you think I was able to count all the instances of the word “love” for Valentine’s Day?) and you can access it on your phone as well with the Kindle app.

    Buy the ebook on Amazon or at Barnes & Noble.

  • Ender’s World Anthology Released & Giveaway

    Ender’s World Anthology Released & Giveaway

    Ender's World

    Today is the release date for Ender’s World, an anthology of essays written by various authors about Ender’s Game. I’m still picking my way through the book and will hopefully have a review ready this week. Keep reading to find out how you can enter to win a free copy from EnderWiggin.net and Smart Pop Books!

    Here’s a synopsis:

    Go deeper into the complexities of Orson Scott Card’s classic novel with science fiction and fantasy writers, YA authors, military strategists, including:

    Ender prequel series coauthor Aaron Johnston on Ender and the evolution of the child hero
    Burn Notice creator Matt Nix on Ender’s Game as a guide to life
    Hugo award–winning writer Mary Robinette Kowal on how Ender’s Game gets away with breaking all the (literary) rules
    Retired US Air Force Colonel Tom Ruby on what the military could learn from Ender about leadership
    Bestselling YA author Neal Shusterman on the ambivalence toward survival that lies at the heart of Ender’s story

    Plus pieces by:

    Hilari Bell
    John Brown
    Mette Ivie Harrison
    Janis Ian
    Alethea Kontis
    David Lubar and Alison S. Myers
    John F. Schmitt
    Ken Scholes
    Eric James Stone

    Also includes never-before-seen content from Orson Scott Card on the writing and evolution of the events in Ender’s Game, from the design of Battle School to the mindset of the pilots who sacrificed themselves in humanity’s fight against the formics.

    Free excerpts from the book can be found here.

    If you’re interested in winning a free copy, simply comment on this post and tell me what part of the book you’re most looking forward to reading. Is it a particular author’s take? Is it the new content by Orson Scott Card? Or do you simply eat up anything Ender’s Game?

    After you’ve commented, log in your entry in the Rafflecopter widget below. This will enable you to get extra entries through other methods. I do check anyone who enters via comments and if you win and there’s no comment by you, I draw someone else, so no cheating!

    a Rafflecopter giveaway

  • Title for Book 3 of First Formic Trilogy to be ‘Earth Awakens’

    Title for Book 3 of First Formic Trilogy to be ‘Earth Awakens’

    First-Formic

    Thanks to a tip from co-author Aaron Johnston, we now know that the title for the final book in the First Formic Trilogy will be EARTH AWAKENS.

    If you haven’t yet read the first book, it’s currently on sale for $10 on Amazon. The paperback version is available for pre-order and will be out April 30. Book 2, Earth Afire, will be available on June 4, 2013.

  • Lots of Love from ‘Ender’s Game’

    Lots of Love from ‘Ender’s Game’

    EWVal

    It’s Valentine’s Day today and I’d like to wish all you fellow fans out there a day full of love and happiness! Did you know that Ender’s Game is a book full of love?

    The word ‘love’, I mean. There are a grand total of 66 instances in Ender’s Game where the word love is used in some form, although it’s not always in a positive way.

    Here’s a list of all of the uses of the word love in the book:

    1. “Hey, Third, we’re talkin to you, Third, hey bugger-lover, we’re talkin to you.”
    2. “You can make yourselves sound like pathetic, cute little children so we’ll love you and be nice to you. But it doesn’t work. I can see you for what you really are.”
    3. “Ender, I’m sorry, I’m sorry, I know how it feels, I’m sorry, I’m your brother, I love you.”
    4. “The sister is our weak link. He really loves her.”
    5. “You’ll still love her, Ender, but you won’t know her.”
    6. “They do love you, Ender. But you have to understand what your life has cost them.”
    7. “So my parents love me and don’t love me?” (2)
    8. “They love you. The question is whether they want you here.”
    9. “Valentine loves me.”
    10. “I love you, Andrew!” Mother called.
    11. “Come back to me! I love you forever!”
    12. “So? What will you do about it? Crawl into a corner? Start kissing their little backsides so they’ll love you again?”
    13. His accent made him exotic and interesting; his broken arm made him a martyr; his sadism made him a natural focus for all those who loved pain in others.
    14. I LOVE YOUR BUTT. LET ME KISS IT. —BERNARD
    15. “Let’s go get Bernard and Shen and freeze these bugger-lovers.”
    16. Ender had never spoken of that to anyone, not even to Mother, but had kept it as a memory of holiness, of how his mother loved him when she thought that no one, not even he, could see or hear.
    17. “Major Anderson, I know I’m wrecking the game, and I know you love it better than any of the boys who play. Hate me if you like, but don’t stop me.”
    18. Dink smiled crookedly. “Because I can’t give up the game.” He tugged at the fabric of his flash suit, which lay on the bunk beside him. “Because I love this.”
    19. “A model student,” said his teachers. “I wish we had a hundred others in the school just like him. Studies all the time, turns in all his work on time. He loves to learn.”
    20. Valentine knew it was a fraud. Peter loved to learn, all right, but the teachers hadn’t taught him anything, ever.
    21. Valentine leaned against the trunk of the pine tree, her little fire a few smoldering ashes. “I love you, too, Peter.”
    22. “I didn’t hate you. I loved you both, I just had to be—had to have control, do you understand that?”
    23. “I don’t believe what you did to those squirrels was part of an act. I think you did it because you love to do it.”
    24. It was possible, wasn’t it, that he loved her, and that in this time of terrifying opportunity he was willing to weaken himself before her in order to win her love. (2)
    25. Because if it were true, even partly true, then Peter was not a monster, and so she could satisfy her Peter-like love of power without fear of becoming monstrous herself.
    26. “I’m trying to solve this problem now, with the person Ender loves and trusts most in the world, perhaps the only person he loves and trusts at all.” (2)
    27. The only person Ender loves and trusts at all. She felt a deep stab of pain, of regret, of shame that now it was Peter she was close to, Peter who was the center of her life.
    28. ALL MY LOVE TURKEY LIPS, VAL
    29. The one real thing, the one precious real thing was his memory of Valentine, the person who loved him before he ever played a game, who loved him whether there was a bugger war or not, and they had taken her and put her on their side. (2)
    30. Dink was right, they were the enemy, they loved nothing and cared for nothing and he was not going to do what they wanted, he was damn well not going to do anything for them.
    31. “And what do you want, love and kisses?”
    32. “He would love to see you now, come to fight a naked boy in a shower, smaller than you, and you brought six friends. He would say, Oh, what honor.”
    33. Ah, thought Ender, he loves to have someone recognize that he is the one in control, that he has power.
    34. “If you touch him you’re a buggerlover!” cried Dink.
    35. Peter loved it when Father did that—”See, it shows that the common man is paying attention”—but it made Valentine feel humiliated for Father.
    36. “And you love it that you got that before I did.”
    37. It was a lovely bite at the party in power, and she got a lot of good mail about it.
    38. “I was afraid that I’d still love you.”
    39. “In the moment when I truly understand my enemy, understand him well enough to defeat him, then in that very moment I also love him. I think it’s impossible to really understand somebody, what they want, what they believe, and not love them the way they love themselves. And then, in that very moment when I love them—” (4)
    40. “Look him in the eye when all the world loves and reveres you. That’ll be defeat in his eyes, Ender. That’s how you win.”
    41. “I want him to love me.”
    42. She had no answer. As far as she knew, Peter didn’t love anybody.
    43. When they got to the shore, she climbed onto the dock and said, “I love you, Ender. More than ever. No matter what you decide.”
    44. With all your hurry, that’s why you took three months, to make me love Earth. Well, it worked.
    45. Valentine, who still loved Ender no matter what happened.
    46. The same voice that he would do anything to keep alive, even return to school, even leave Earth behind again for another four or forty or four thousand years. Even if she loved Peter more.
    47. I was cut off from all the people that I loved, everything I knew, living in this alien catacomb and forced to do nothing of importance but teach student after student, each one so hopeful, each one, ultimately, a weakling, a failure.
    48. “I can’t bear to see what this is doing to him.” And the other voice answered, “I know. I love him too.”
    49. All dreams. If there was love or pity for him, it was only in his dreams.
    50. Take me home, he said silently to Graff. In my dream you said you loved me. Take me home.
    51. So much compassion that he could win the love of his underlings and work with them like a perfect machine, as perfect as the buggers.
    52. Whatever they may feel about other people, Ender, they love you.
    53. And we can take with us what their worlds have never known—cities full of people who live private, individual lives, who love and hate each other for their own reasons.
    54. The best you can do is choose to fill the roles given you by good people, by people who love you.
    55. I came because I’ve spent my whole life in the company of the brother that I hated. Now I want a chance to know the brother that I love, before it’s too late, before we’re not children anymore.”
    56. They knew him now, and he had won their love and their respect.
    57. There were crimes and quarrels, alongside kindness and cooperation; there were people who loved each other and people who did not; it was a human world.
    58. This was a new thing in the world, two queens that loved and helped each other instead of battling, and together they were stronger than any other hive.
    59. They began to live by it as best they could, and when their loved ones died, a believer would arise beside the grave to be the Speaker for the Dead, and say what the dead one would have said, but with full candor, hiding no faults and pretending no virtues.

    Source: Kindle Edition of Ender’s Game

  • Free Excerpt from ‘Ender’s World’ Available from Smart Pop Books

    Free Excerpt from ‘Ender’s World’ Available from Smart Pop Books

    Ender's World

    Those of you that want to know more about ‘Ender’s World’ can now read a free excerpt from the book, which will be released by Smart Pop Books this coming April.

    To get the free excerpt, which includes part of John Brown’s essay, “The Monster’s Heart” and some reader questions answered by Orson Scott Card, head over to the Smart Pop Books page on Ender’s World and enter your email address in the box that asks if you want to sign up for free chapter and book updates.

    The book, which is available now for pre-order on Amazon, is an anthology of essays about Ender’s Game interspersed with a fan Q&A with author Orson Scott Card.

    Experience the thrill of reading Ender’s Game all over again

    Go deeper into the complexities of Orson Scott Card’s classic novel with science fiction and fantasy writers, YA authors, military strategists, including:

    • Ender prequel series coauthor Aaron Johnston on Ender and the evolution of the child hero
    • Burn Notice creator Matt Nix on Ender’s Game as a guide to life
    • Hugo award–winning writer Mary Robinette Kowal on how Ender’s Game gets away with breaking all the (literary) rules
    • Retired US Air Force Colonel Tom Ruby on what the military could learn from Ender about leadership
    • Bestselling YA author Neal Shusterman on the ambivalence toward survival that lies at the heart of Ender’s story
  • Ender’s World Buttons from Smart Pop Books

    Ender’s World Buttons from Smart Pop Books

    Smart Pop Books is getting their convention swag ready for MystiCon (February 22-24, 2013) and SD Comic Con (July 17-21, 2013) and gave a little sneak peek on Twitter.

    Enders-World-Buttons

    Those are some cool buttons! Comic Con just announced their badge sale date, so be sure you have your Comic Con International Member ID registered!

    Follow @SmartPopBooks on Twitter!

  • Earth Unaware in Paperback Available April 30

    Earth Unaware in Paperback Available April 30

    Earth-Unaware

    For those of you that have been waiting for a paperback version of the First Formic War prequel series by Orson Scott Card and Aaron Johnston, the book is now available for pre-order and will ship around April 30, 2013.

    Here’s the synopsis of the novel:

    A hundred years before Ender’s Game, humans thought they were alone in the galaxy. Humanity was slowly making their way out from Earth to the planets and asteroids of the Solar System, exploring and mining and founding colonies.

    The mining ship El Cavador is far out from Earth, in the deeps of the Kuiper Belt, beyond Pluto. Other mining ships, and the families that live on them, are few and far between this far out. So when El Cavador’s telescopes pick up a fast-moving object coming in-system, it’s hard to know what to make of it. It’s massive and moving at a significant fraction of the speed of light.

    But the ship has other problems. Their systems are old and failing. The family is getting too big. There are claim-jumping corporates bringing Asteroid Belt tactics to the Kuiper Belt. Worrying about a distant object that might or might not be an alien ship seems…not important.

    They’re wrong. It’s the most important thing that has happened to the human race in a million years. This is humanity’s first contact with an alien race. The First Formic War is about to begin.

    You can read my review of the book here.

  • Seeking Name Credits in ‘Ender’s World’

    Seeking Name Credits in ‘Ender’s World’

    Ender's World

    Last June, publisher Smart Pop Books sent out a call for fan questions to be submitted to Orson Scott Card for their anthology Ender’s World, which is due for release this coming April. Some of you posted your questions here on EnderWiggin.net while others posted on the Smart Pop website.

    A good number of those questions were answered in the book, but without names attached and one fan is trying to change that by working with Smart Pop to collect names to include with the questions. If you were one of the individuals that posted a question and you posted under a pseudonym, please email EC Spencer at wiggine@gmail.com using the email address you used when posting your question and give her your name. If your question got included, it could mean a free book for you, so be sure to jump on this!

    Time is of the essence, so act fast! If you can’t remember if you asked a question, you can see the original post on Smart Pop here.

  • Ender’s World Available for Pre-Order

    Ender’s World Available for Pre-Order

    Ender's World

    Next year, Smart Pop Books will be publishing an anthology of Ender’s Game articles edited by Orson Scott Card. The nice folks over at Smart Pop have sent over a press release revealing the contributor names and giving fans a better idea of what the book will be about.

    The book is currently available for pre-order on Amazon and is set for release April 2, 2013.

    ORSON SCOTT CARD EDITS ALL-NEW COLLECTION ON HIS CLASSIC NOVEL ENDER’S GAME

    Orson Scott Card’s Ender’s Game is a science fiction classic that has won not only Nebula, Hugo, and Locus Awards since its 1985 publication, but also the love of generations of readers. Now Card has teamed up with Smart Pop to produce Ender’s World: Fresh Perspectives on the SF Classic Ender’s Game, a collection of science fiction, fantasy, and YA writers, along with military strategists, offering new insight into Ender’s Game and other stories in the Ender chronology. Edited and with brand new content by Card himself, it’s the perfect book at the perfect time for old fans and new readers alike to (re)enter the world of Ender’s Game in preparation for the November 2013 film adaptation.

    In Ender’s World, Card answers some of readers’ biggest questions, from What qualities did the Battle School tests look for? to If you could go back and re-write Ender’s Game, what would you change?

    In addition, contributors who are also Ender’s Game fans present a spectrum of thoughtful, illuminating pieces and analyses: military strategists Colonel Tom Ruby and John F. Schmitt offer insights into (and from) the human–formic war; Aaron Johnston, coauthor of Card’s Formic Wars prequel novels, explains why Ender is a short Clint Eastwood; Grammy-nominated songwriter Janis Ian argues that, in the Ender universe, size matters; Matt Nix, creator and executive producer of Burn Notice, uses Ender’s Game as an often humorous guide to life, from angsty teenagerhood to the present; New York Times bestselling author Neal Shusterman remembers the first time he read Ender’s Game, and offers a meditation on the book’s biggest moral questions.

    The full list of contributors:

    • Hilari Bell
    • John Brown
    • Mette Ivie Harrison
    • Janis Ian
    • Aaron W. Johnston
    • Alethea Kontis
    • Mary Tobinette Kowal
    • David Lubar and Allison S. Meyers
    • Matt Nix
    • Colonel Tom Ruby
    • John F. Schmitt
    • Eric James Stone
    • Neal Shusterman
    • Ken Scholes

    With its variety of themes and viewpoints, Ender’s World intrigues, entertains, and provokes readers to further consider Ender’s Game’s influence on the science fiction genre, its commentary on society, and its place in literature.

    Source: Smart Pop Books

     

  • Synopsis and Cover for ‘Earth Afire’ Released

    Synopsis and Cover for ‘Earth Afire’ Released

    EarthAfire

    This past July, I reviewed Earth Unaware, the Ender’s Game prequel novel by Orson Scott Card and Aaron Johnston. The book did a lot of foreshadowing for Ender’s Game and was, in the end, an enjoyable read for me. The only problem was that it was obviously incomplete and felt more like a “Part 1” than a “Book 1”. Thankfully, the next book is slated for release next June.

    Titled Earth Afire, the book picks up right where Earth Unaware left off. The synopsis is below and contains SPOILERS for the first book.

    100 years before Ender’s Game, the aliens arrived on Earth with fire and death. This is the story of the First Formic War.

    Victor Delgado beat the alien ship to Earth, but just barely. Not soon enough to convince skeptical governments that there was a threat. They didn’t believe that until space stations and ships and colonies went up in sudden flame.

    And when that happened, only Mazer Rackham and the Mobile Operations Police could move fast enough to meet the threat.

    Earth Afire can currently be pre-ordered on Amazon.com.

    Source: SF Signal

  • Give the Gift of Ender for Christmas

    Give the Gift of Ender for Christmas

    Ender's Game Gift Edition

    With the movie now 326 days away, it’s time for all you current Ender fans to start spreading word of the book’s existence. What better way to do it than to force feed someone a copy of Ender’s Game?

    I’m kidding, of course. But there is a very nice hardcover “Gift Edition” of Ender’s Game available for sale. I bought two of these back when I headed up to New Orleans to visit the set but forgot them in my suitcase and so couldn’t get them signed. Still, maybe you’ll see one up for grabs for my holiday giveaways soon!

    The gift edition sells for just under $14 on Amazon.

  • Review: Earth Unaware: The First Formic War

    Review: Earth Unaware: The First Formic War

    Orson Scott Card’s latest Ender novel Earth Unaware: The First Formic War, co-authored by Aaron Johnston, was released last week on July 17 and my review copy came in the mail just a couple of days later.

    A hardcover book of 364 pages (excluding the Afterword), Earth Unaware is an official Ender’s Game prequel that brings us the story of humanity’s very first encounter with the Formics. Earth Unaware has interesting and well fleshed out characters, a steady pace, and great foreshadowing for Ender’s Game.  The book is split into three separate storylines and two of them eventually intertwine to provide you with a thrilling and terrifying ride through the Kuniper Belt.

    First there’s the El Cavador storyline, told mostly from the perspective of Victor Delgado, a brilliant 17 year-old free miner mechanic on his Venezuelan family’s mining ship, the El Cavador. You start off meeting Victor at a time of painful loss, as his closest cousin and best friend Alejandra, nicknamed Janda, is “zogged” or married off to another clan early to an Italian clan the Delgados have been trading with for the past week because they sense that the two cousins are falling in love. (this chapter can be read as a sample on Tor.com) For her sake, Victor chooses not to say goodbye and instead immerses himself into his work.

    That’s soon interrupted when Janda’s younger sister Edimar, an apprentice in the ship’s crow’s nest called The Eye, spots something in the distance that by her calculations is decelerating. The conclusion they both come to is that it’s an alien starship headed for Earth. They notify the ship’s captain immediately and with only the departed Italian ships and one corporate mining ship within communication distance, they send off messages in the hopes that they reach them.

    The second storyline follows that of the Makarhu, a corporate space mining ship led by Lem Jukes, son of Ukko Jukes, who is the wealthiest man in the galaxy and president of Earth’s largest corporate mining company Juke Limited. Lem is on a mission for Juke Limited’s R&D division to test the outrageously expensive prototype “glaser” or gravity laser to hopefully provide them with a revolutionary way to mine minerals out of asteroids. The Makarhu is the corporate ship nearest to the El Cavador.

    Impatient and eager to return home with good news, Lem is plagued by delays and an overcautious lead scientist and after their first test on a “pebble” or small asteroid, he makes the call to head to a much larger asteroid nearby. The problem is that it’s being mined by the Delgado clan. Not to be discouraged, Lem suggests the unethical practice of “bumping” the El Cavador from the rock and taking it for themselves. This begins a terrible conflict between the two ships, with what’s presumably a Formic ship quickly approaching.

    Back on Earth, we follow Captain Wit O’Toole, head of the elite peacekeeping force known as the Mobile Operations Police or MOPs for short. Recruiting from the most elite military forces on the planet, Wit’s visit to the New Zealand SAS base is where we get our first glimpse of young Mazer Rackham. The downside is that while Wit’s story is interesting and entertaining, he parts ways with Mazer early on in the book and his story fails to tie into the meat of the story in a relevant manner and in the end Wit only serves as backstory for what’s obviously another book to come.

    Victor makes for a fascinating young adult character with admirable qualities and a deeply rooted loyalty to his family and a “home” he’s never even seen in Earth, since he is space-born. Lem could have been a typical rich kid character, but thankfully, he’s a reluctant non-hero with ethics and the yoke of his father muzzling his full potential. This makes him a much more complicated and therefore interesting man.

    You see shades of Ender’s Game throughout, but most notably with the glaser, which is obviously the prototype for what eventually becomes the Little Doctor. Wit O’Toole’s elite force leads one to believe that he’ll eventually help form the International Fleet, since his MOPs are a global force that do not answer to individual governments and strive to keep harm from coming to civilians. The climax of the novel brings you thrills similar to the Battle Room and you can’t help but think that this influenced how they trained the students in the school.

    I’d been struggling through Children of the Mind when Earth Unaware landed on my desk and I finished the book in a quick three days, being a bit slow to start since I’d already read most of the first chapter online. Once I got a bit deeper in, however, the story and characters pulled me in until I couldn’t put it down. It’s a very strong novel for what I presume will be a set of prequel books. My only wish was that Captain Wit had tied in better with the main storyline.

    If you’ve been waiting to buy the book until you read reviews, consider this review one that urges you to pick up the book immediately. While decidedly different from Ender’s Game, Earth Unaware is a quality novel and overall a highly entertaining read.

    Earth Unaware was provided to me by Tor Books. I was not paid to write this review. All opinions expressed above are my own.

  • Ender’s Game Author Signings at SDCC 2012

    Ender’s Game Author Signings at SDCC 2012

    Aaron Johnston, co-author of the upcoming Ender’s Game prequel Earth Unaware, has published a schedule of book signings for himself, Orson Scott Card, and Emily Janice Card (Card’s daughter).

    Included in these book signings are the chance for you to buy Earth Unaware a few days early, as the book won’t be hitting shelves until July 17.

    Friday, July 13

    Orson Scott Card and Aaron Johnston – Earth Unaware
    12:00-1:00pm
    Tor In-booth signing – #2707

    Saturday, July 14
    Emily and Orson Scott Card – Laddertop, Volume 1
    12:00-1:00pm
    Tor In-booth signing – #2707

    Orson Scott Card – Earth Unaware, Ender’s Game
    3:00-4:00pm
    A Wrinkle In Time Panel – Rm 23ABC

    4:30-5:30pm – Scott Card and Aaron Johnston
    Post Panel Book signing

    Sunday, July 15
    Emily Card – Laddertop, Volume 1
    2:45pm – 3:45pm
    Heroes for the Middle-Grade Reader Panel – Rm 5AB

    Mr. Johnston has also informed me that only five copies of Earth Unaware will be available on Friday, so make sure you plan ahead if you mean to get one of those five. Otherwise, bringing their other titles is probably your safest bet.

    Source: Aaron Johnston