Tag: NPR Top 100 Books

  • NPR Calls Ender’s Game Too Violent for Young Readers

    NPR Calls Ender’s Game Too Violent for Young Readers

    Warning: this editorial contains major spoilers for the book Ender’s Game.

    Readers of this site may remember that about a month ago I posted about nominating Ender’s Game for NPR’s Top 100 Young Adult novels. The founder of Ender’s Ansible had asked a bunch of the fansites to help get the book nominated into their poll by spreading word of the list to the fanbase and I was more than happy to oblige, even though I don’t put much weight into lists like these since so many places love to make them.

    So imagine my surprise today when I found out that Ender’s Game has been deliberately left off of their young adult fiction poll. The reason?

    The judges cut Ender’s Game for the same reason — Ender himself is young, but the book’s violence isn’t appropriate for young readers.

    This baffled me, to be honest, because I’ve always felt that one of the most tragic parts of the novel includes the fact that the true violent nature of Ender’s actions is deliberately kept from him. When Card chose to hide this aspect of Ender from his own protagonist, he hid this from his readers as well until the very end.

    As you may or may not recall, Ender doesn’t find out about the deaths of Stilson and Bonzo Madrid until he watches Graff’s court martial years later on Eros. By then, the climax of the novel has numbed Ender and readers, and therefore effectually softened the emotional impact of their deaths through the terrifying reality of Ender’s destruction of an entire species. The scenes of the fights themselves may have been violent, but they were also quick and somewhat vague.

    Which leads me to question whether the NPR judges have even read the books they included in their poll.  Other books that made it onto their list include:

    • Lord of the Flies by William Golding
    • The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins
    • Divergent by Veronica Roth
    • Maze Runner by James Dashner
    • Dune by Frank Herbert

    Apparently Ender’s violence isn’t “appropriate”, but the following passages are shining examples of acceptable violence for young readers.

    It takes a few moments to find [name omitted for spoilers] in the dim light, in the blood. Then the raw hunk of meat that used to be my enemy makes a sound, and I know where his mouth is. And I think the word he’s trying to say is please. Pity, not vengeance, sends my arrow flying into his skull.

    Collins, Suzanne (2009-09-01). The Hunger Games

    Two more Grievers broke from the pack and swarmed over [name omitted for spoilers], piling on top of each other, snapping and cutting at the boy, as if they wanted to rub it in, show their vicious cruelty. Somehow, impossibly, [name omitted for spoilers] didn’t scream. Thomas lost sight of the body as he struggled with Newt, thankful for the distraction. Newt finally gave up, collapsing backward in defeat.

    Dashner, James (2009-09-25). The Maze Runner

    [name omitted for spoilers] lies on the floor next to his bed, clutching at his face. Surrounding his head is a halo of blood, and jutting between his clawing fingers is a silver knife handle. My heart thumping in my ears, I recognize it as a butter knife from the dining hall. The blade is stuck in [name omitted for spoilers]’s eye.

    Roth, Veronica (2011-05-03). Divergent

    I have read all three of these books and so I therefore know first hand just how completely violent they are.

    That’s not to say that Ender’s Game isn’t violent. Ender does beat another child unconscious and fights naked in a shower, punching another student in the groin. But how is this any more violent than the passages above?

    Sure, maybe the children in Ender’s Game are younger than “young adults”, but so are all the children in Lord of the Flies, which successfully made it onto the list. Dune features a very sadistic and violent group of characters in the Harkonens. Both of these books made the list because they’ve “become rites of passage for teen readers”. Does Ender’s Game get no credit for its themes on child bullying, population control, and the lengths humanity can be stretched to “for the greater good”? Does The Hunger Games, which kills a whopping 20+ children violently, only get on the list because it’s wildly popular right now?

    I suppose I shouldn’t even let this bother me since as I mentioned earlier, lists like these don’t mean much. Despite this, I still find it rather ridiculous and insulting to presume that young adult readers, to which these books are pitched to, can’t handle the violence of Ender’s Game, but are deemed adequately equipped to emotionally handle mutilated corpses and head stabbings from books with more dramatic and graphic violence.

    Something just doesn’t add up there.

  • Nominate ‘Ender’s Game for NPR’s Top 100 Books List

    Nominate ‘Ender’s Game for NPR’s Top 100 Books List

    Ender's Game

    Our friends over at Ender’s Ansible have re-kindled a campaign they started last year to get Ender’s Game onto NPR’s Best 100 Books, which has just recently opened up to nominations for this year’s list. Last year’s category focused on science fiction and fantasy and thanks to fans, Ender’s Game made it on the list as #3. You can check out last year’s list here.

    This year NPR has chosen a Young Adult theme for their list.

    To nominate Ender’s Game (the series), you’ll need to either log in or register at NPR and then comment with your nominations. They’ll let you nominate up to five books at once, so if you’re a big Harry Potter or Hunger Games fan, you won’t have to choose Ender’s Game over those, you just need to include it in your list!

    Even if other people nominate the books you want to nominate, you should still comment if you can since nominations count as votes later down the line. The rules:

    1. Limit yourself to five titles per post. Don’t hesitate to nominate a book that someone else has already listed; your entry will count as a vote that will help that title progress to the next round.

    2. Nominate “multivolume novels” as one work. The Harry Potter series or the Hunger Games trilogy, for example, will be judged as single, collective works — so don’t bother listing the separate titles in the series.

    3. That said, not all series are “multivolume novels.” To be judged as a collective work, the books in a series must be written by the same originating author or authors and must tell a more or less continuous story — usually about a consistent group of characters. So, you can’t nominate the whole Goosebumps series as such, but you can nominate The Horror at Camp Jellyjam as an individual work.

    Thanks in advance for helping nominate the series!