Ender's Shadow (Ender's Shadow Series #1) by Orson Scott Card

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(Mass Market Paperback)

  • Pub. Date: December 2000
  • 480pp
  • Sales Rank: 16,115

    Reader Rating: (161 ratings)

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    • Overview
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    • Features

    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: December 2000
    • Publisher: Doherty, Tom Associates, LLC
    • Format: Mass Market Paperback, 480pp
    • Sales Rank: 16,115

    Synopsis

    Life on the streets is tough. But if Bean has learned anything, it?s how to survive. Not with his fists. Bean is way too small to fight. But with his brain. Like his colleague and rival Ender Wiggin, Bean has been chosen to enroll in Battle School. And like Ender, Bean will be called upon to perform an extraordinary service for humanity. A reader?s guide is available for this Starscape edition?perfect reader readers ten and up?of the parallel novel to the extraordinary Ender?s Game.

    Publishers Weekly

    You can't step into the same river twice, but Card has gracefully dipped twice into the same inkwell--once for Ender's Game and again for this stand-alone "parallel novel." The course readers will follow this time is of the superhuman child Bean. Raised on streets ruled by starving children's gangs, he was too weak, at age four, to hold peanuts in his hand, but ingenious enough to trick the other children into civilizing themselves--and to keep himself alive. When his genius and uncanny understanding of individuals' motivations are discovered, he is sent to Battle School, where children learn to command fleets for the war with the alien Buggers--the smallest kid ever to do so. Bean is not as perfect as Ender Wiggin--hero of the Ender Quartet, begun with Ender's Game and concluded with Children of the Mind--but he becomes Ender's ally. Though Bean is cold at first, the kind of child who weighs the costs of hugging the nun who saved him from the streets, he wants to understand the respect and love that Ender wields. Thus, Bean's story is twofold: he learns to be a soldier, and to be human. Devotees of the Ender saga will delight in the revelations about the formation of Ender's Dragon army and about the last of Ender's games. Though newcomers to the series may miss many of the novel's points, the wonders of Battle School and flashsuits and children's armies should keep them turning pages. As always, everyone will be struck by the power of Card's children, always more and less than human, perfect yet struggling, tragic yet hopeful, wondrous and strange. (Sept.) Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.

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    Biography

    With a raft of science fiction awards and a dedicated following, Orson Scott Card writes imaginative and compelling novels that also explore questions about morality and religion. His Ender series is the most popular; but he also offers a fresh take on the Bible in his Women of Genesis books and has authored other history-based fantasy series.

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    Customer Reviews

    Ender's Shadowby Anonymous

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    November 22, 2009: Ender's Shadow is a marvelous and engaging book. It is the parrelel novel to Ender's Game, and it gives an indepth view of the world from Bean's point of view. Card's charachter decelopement skills leave nothing to be desired. He pulls the characters along, and introduces them to new expierences. They evolve beautifully to carry the story along. This book is completely imagineable and engaging. It shows the depth of poverty in the world and how one story has hundreds of different angles. This books is complex and thrilling. Even if your not a fan of Sci-fi, this book is one of the best.

    I Also Recommend: Ender's Game (Ender Wiggin Series #1), Speaker for the Dead (Ender Wiggin Series #2), Shadow of the Hegemon (Ender's Shadow Series #2), Shadow of the Giant (Ender's Shadow Series #4).

    Ender's Game with a Fresh Perspectiveby Rebco

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    July 10, 2009: I would highly recommend this book for any lovers of Ender's Game or even just sci-fi/fantasy in general. The same story line as Ender's Game this is told from the perspective of Bean, Ender's second in command. It is riveting to hear about Bean's background before he entered the school and to really understand more about some of the events that took place in Ender's Game. This book can be read either on it's own, or as a companion to Ender's Game.


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