Here’s something fun for those of you still watching the trailer over and over. Watch the trailer for Das große Spiel!
And yet again in Français for La Stratégie Ender!
Here’s something fun for those of you still watching the trailer over and over. Watch the trailer for Das große Spiel!
And yet again in Français for La Stratégie Ender!
Happy Friday everyone!
In the Hunger Games fandom, there’s a podcast that I guest on every week and one of the fun ideas they’ve done for both movies so far is compile a “bucket list” for fans. I loved this idea so much I made one for Ender’s Game. You can watch the video below. Be sure to subscribe to the EnderWiggin.net YouTube channel as well!
How many of these can you check off before Novender 1st?
Check out this amazing oil painting of Ender done by SidharthChaturvedi on DeviantArt for a show at the Modern Eden gallery in San Francisco, CA.
Asa Butterfield spoke with Hollywood.com recently and reiterated how tough his training was for Ender’s Game.
“It was painful,” he says. “There was all sorts of marching, running. ‘Left face, right face’ where you turn in different directions.” Butterfield admits that the rigorous boot camp helped him form a close bond with his fellow teenage costars — mostly because if they didn’t keep up with one another, they all suffered. “If one person in the group of about 100 extras, and 10 or so cast [members], made a mistake, everyone had to do 10 push-ups. And we’d be jogging and if one person fell behind, we’d have to do 10 push-ups. Then [the trainers would] extend it… because they’re a bit mean [laughs].”
I’d like to use that quote as another chance to say that this is why Ender isn’t 6 in the movie. You can’t really scoff at the ethics of the International Fleet’s practices and then demand that real little kids get put through this kind of an ordeal just for entertainment.
Anyone worried about Butterfield’s understanding of the complicated character Ender Wiggin may feel better about what he has to say about Ender’s moral complexity.
“One of the main ones Gavin and I talked about was leadership,” Butterfield says. “Ender’s way of leading and communicating with other people — not just children, but adults — is completely different. It’s one of the things that makes him shine in the school.” The actor sees Ender’s two older siblings, Peter and Valentine, as ends of a scale that the character drifts between over the course of the film. “One’s completely selfless and open, Peter is the epitome of the worst human being. Ender knows he doesn’t want to be Peter, but at times he can’t help having his dark side shine through.”
Asa also mentioned Ender’s dark side during the “Meet the Fleet” Google+ Hangout from earlier this week:
The interview is a great read, so be sure to head over to Hollywood.com to read the entire thing.
Looks like the book is all ready to be snapped up by new fans when the trailer lands next week on May 7.
A new movie tie-in edition has been spotted in bookstores already and you can pre-order the book from Barnes & Noble online. You can also pre-order from Amazon.
Are you going to grab one? Will you get a hardcover or a paperback?
I’m thinking Mother’s Day gift for next week since my mom is the one that first put the book into my hands as a teen. 😉
Thanks to Ender News for the tip.
Actor Ben Kingsley is doing a lot of press for the release of Iron Man 3 and spoke briefly to the Coventry Telegraph about his role as Mazer Rackham. Possible spoilers here for those who haven’t read the book!
Ender’s Game is coming out later this year. How did that work out?
Lovely, but quite different from the challenge of the Mandarin. With Mandarin I was very rarely involved in green screen. In Gandhi we had none. We actually had 4,000 people on screen for the funeral.
In Ender’s Game we had a lot of green screen. The kids in the film were obviously challenged by being told ‘It is all going to be CGI-d later but you have to react’ . Gavin (Hood) looked after them so well and they did form a wonderful relationship with him. So that he would, where possible, talk them through what they were seeing while they were reacting to it.
He really knocked himself out pumping energy into those kids who couldn’t see anything. I think it is going to be a wonderful film.
Tell us about your role.
Mazar Rackham. He is a combination of historically ancient warrior in that he is descended from Maori and has Maori tattooed on his face. And at the same time he is teaching children how to operate drones. So he is very advanced and also rooted in an ancient warrior tradition.
Source: Coventry Telegraph
Take a look at the cover art for an upcoming Omnibus edition of both Ender’s Game and Speaker for the Dead by Vorpalizer.
This edition will only be available through the Science Fiction Book Club and is set for release on May 8, 2013.
Ender’s Game Google Alerts are usually pretty boring. Book reviews and book reviews and more book reviews. Occasionally something really cool comes up, like an Ender’s Game themed baby shower!
Here are some Ender cupcakes, which are really cool!
There were a ton of desserts, all with cute little Ender’s Game themed named like Dink Meekerons (macarons) and PeterButter and Jelly Stars.
You can check out all the photos on Twinkiechan.com.
So I guess my question is, if this is the couple’s first baby, is it being named Peter or Ender? 😉
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 Game author Orson Scott Card Q&A from Andy Lindsay on Vimeo.
In a video Q&A produced for Tor Books, author Orson Scott Card talked about his personal favorites in books, movies, authors, and tv shows. A couple of questions centered around Ender’s Game:
With Ender’s Game you’ve written young characters who appeal strongly to adult readers. What’s your secret for engaging both YA and adult readers?
If I knew that I would do it every time because not every book appeals to everybody. But I always try to appeal to everybody. I always aim at the widest possible audience. But the truth is the only difference between young readers and older readers is young readers are patient with one kind of bad writing and older readers are patient with another kind of bad writing. I try not to do bad writing. I try to write as clearly as I can, a story that I care about and believe in and then hope that there are readers that will care about it and believe in it as well.
Why did you decide to use a young boy as the protagonist in a book about a great war between humanity and aliens?
Gotta remember, this started as a short story and I had no plan for a book at the time. The story idea that I had was the Battle Room, a safe place to train people for zero gravity combat, for thinking in zero g. I had that since I was 16 years old, but I had no story and I knew I had no story until I was in my early 20s and I finally realized, no, the time to train people for space combat is not when they’re adults, not when they’re 18 or 19 years old, they have too many gravity bound habits. You gotta grab them when they’re kids. When I realized that they were children, that they would be starting with 6 and 7 year-olds, taking them away from their families, then I had a story. And that’s when I wrote Remember the enemy’s gate is down. But when I started that short story I had no idea that it would ever be a novel. I had no idea how it would end. I didn’t even know that it would ever leave the Battle School and go to another place and involve a wider war so I just used a placeholder alien. The standard giant insect alien from science fiction. It was a MacGuffin, nothing more, so it’s not a book about a war that happens to have a child as the protagonist, it’s a book about a child that happens to have a war as a setting.
Ender’s Game has often been cited as a good book to read by readers who are not fans of science fiction. Why do you think it appeals to both fans and those who do not usually read science fiction?
I think it’s because I’m in the latter category. When I was growing up, science fiction was part of my reading, but only accidentally. I read everything. I was reading classics. I was reading historical fiction, romantic fiction, I read whatever was interesting at the time. A lot of non-fiction as well. But science fiction was valued not because of the genre itself, I never thought of myself as a science fiction reader, I simply loved certain science fiction writers. So I first discovered Heinlein and Norton in junior high library and devoured everything that they had written in book form at that time for the juveniles, the young adult fiction. THen in college I discovered Ray Bradbury, Isaac Asimov and loved them for the things that they taught me and Larry Niven came the last of all, but those writers are the ones that I think shaped me as a science fiction writer. But, they were never the majority of my reading. I was as likely to be excited about other authors as I was about them. So I think that I bring to writing an awareness of both the inside and the outside. I know enough about science fiction to write, to use the tropes, to use the techniques and methods of science fiction, but then I’m also writing to people like me who are not committed to the field. I’m not writing to insiders. I feel like I’m starting from ground zero. I write for a bare stage, I’m a playwright before I’m a writer of fiction and I write for Shakespeare’s stage. I write for Shakespeare’s audience really, people who expect to have the actor’s words tell them everything that they need to know, so that results in a kind of writing that is very spare. I only tell you what you need to know. I wrote 250 audio plays when I was starting out in my career. This is truly voice alone storytelling, so that only what the character’s say to each other is going to convey the meaning and the setting, everything. So that’s the way that I write. I make sure that all the information is present in the story. I don’t expect you to already bring to it a full knowledge of this or that novel, this or that tradition in science fiction. I make everything self contained and I make it very spare. That’s why people who try to abridge my work despair. There’s nothing there for fluff or decoration. It’s there because it’s functional in the story.
Source: Andy Lindsay on Vimeo
Hailee Steinfeld was at an event with her brother Griffin tonight helping to support Our Military Kids and Ender’s Game fan Hannah asked her cousin Sarah to head there to meet her in the hopes of getting an autographed book and photo.
As you can see below, Hailee signed it with the name Petra under her own. No doubt one of many to come!
Here’s a bit from Sarah on getting to meet Hailee:
It was so great getting to meet Hailee! She was super awesome and incredibly nice! She took the time to talk with my daughter and sign everything I brought. Such a great experience!
Sounds like it was fun! Here’s a photo of Hannah’s signed book, with the phrase “Shoot straight”.
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:
Source: Kindle Edition of Ender’s Game
Apparently the term “oldie but goodie” applies to the book Ender’s Game, which according to Publisher’s Weekly, was the top-selling science fiction book of 2012. The book not only topped the genre, but outsold the 2nd listed book by almost 200%.
Science Fiction
1. Ender’s Game by Orson Scott Card. Tor. 100,387
2. Ready Player One by Ernest Cline. Broadway. 50,593
3. Star Wars: Darth Plagueis by James Luceno. Lucas Books. 31,543
4. The Ultimate Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams. Del Rey. 27,220
5. Star Wars: Apocalypse by Troy Denning. Lucas Books. 26,140
6. Dune by Frank Herbert. Ace. 25,532
7. A Rising Thunder by David Weber. Baen Books. 25,348
8. HALO: The Thursday War by Karen Traviss. Tor. 24,936
9. HALO: Glasslands by Karen Traviss. Tor. 24,932
10. The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams. Ballantine. 24,120
Perhaps news of the movie has re-ignited interest in the novel, as that seems like quite a few copies to sell for a book that’s heading into its 28th year in publication.
It should be noted, however, that this list likely only lists statistics for print editions. The self published science fiction e-book Wool by Hugh Howey is nowhere to be found on the list, despite its explosion into the science fiction genre last year. If you’re a fan of Wool, be sure to visit my fansite for it: The Down Deep.
Source: Publisher’s Weekly via OSC’s Twitter