:IMAGE.half | :INFO.half Ender's Game A six-year-old trained to command a war. Card makes you forget this is monstrous because the story moves so fast. Then the ending reminds you. | :INFO The Boy Who Would Save Earth Orson Scott Card's 1985 novel follows Andrew Ender Wiggin, a child of exceptional intelligence selected by the military to attend Battle School in space, where children are trained through increasingly brutal war games to become commanders against an alien race called the Formics. Ender is isolated, manipulated, and pushed to his limits by adults who believe they need him to be something more than human. The novel won both the Hugo and Nebula Awards in 1985 and has remained a staple of military science fiction and school reading lists ever since. :JOURNEY Reading Ender's Game 2 Chosen 3 Competitive 4 Isolated 4 Disturbing 5 Relentless 5 Shattering :QUOTE [quotetype:plain, subtitle:Orson Scott Card] 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. :NOTE.half Card originally published the story as a short story in Analog magazine in 1977. He expanded it into a novel in 1985 specifically to provide background for the novel Speaker for the Dead, which he considered his real masterwork. | :NOTE.half The novel is required reading at the Marine Corps University in Quantico, Virginia. Military strategists have cited its exploration of game theory, leadership under stress, and the ethics of pre-emptive war as genuinely instructive. :LINK https://www.google.com/search?q=Ender+Game+Orson+Scott+Card+book Find a copy near you