Whitemithrandir Posted July 3, 2004 Posted July 3, 2004 I've read all of OSC's books, follow his cult at hatrack.com, and went to Enderscon. I just finished re-reading his Worthing Saga this weekend, and I must say, in the spirit of the 4th of July, nobody writes about the unquenching quest for freedom and liberty being as vital as breath than Orson Scott Card. Best sci-fi author since Asimov, most beautiful short-fiction writer since Le Guin. Word economics To express my vast wisdom I speak in haiku's.
Dereth Posted July 4, 2004 Posted July 4, 2004 Well, the only books by him that I have read would be the Ender's Game series. The first one was an amazing book and I loved it, especially that twist at the end, but then the rest of the series was merely average imo. I've reread the first book of the series, "Ender's Game", around 4 times but I've never touched any of the other books since the first reading.
Weiser_Cain Posted July 4, 2004 Posted July 4, 2004 I only read the ender series. Again the first one was good, then it went quickly downhill. I wonder if he just got lucky with that first one? I'm more of a fantasy person now anyway, ask me about that. Yaw devs, Yaw!!! (
Leferd Posted July 4, 2004 Posted July 4, 2004 Since Asimov? Since Asimov's generation? Since his birth? passing? or as in...best after Asimov? Well...there are plenty of good SF (not sci-fi --urgggh) writers in his generation: Arthur C. Clarke, Alfred I'm a aware of his--Ray Bradbury--work Bester (simpson's reference), Robert Heinlein, and Poul Anderson Post Asimov Generation: Harlan Ellison, Philip K. ****, Frank Herbert, Larry Niven, Roger Zelazny, Philip Jose Farmer, Michael Crichton, Michael Moor****, and Card. Within the Post Asimov generation, I'd rate Card well behind Ellison, P.K. ****, and Herbert and in the same pack as the rest on that list. "Things are funny...are comedic, because they mix the real with the absurd." - Buzz Aldrin."P-O-T-A-T-O-E" - Dan Quayle
tripleRRR Posted July 4, 2004 Posted July 4, 2004 I think Frank Herbert and Zahn are much better than OSC ever was, once he got past Ender's Game everything went downhill, though that book was pretty good. TripleRRR Using a gamepad to control an FPS is like trying to fight evil through maple syrup.
Whitemithrandir Posted July 4, 2004 Author Posted July 4, 2004 Well, the only books by him that I have read would be the Ender's Game series. The first one was an amazing book and I loved it, especially that twist at the end, but then the rest of the series was merely average imo. I've reread the first book of the series, "Ender's Game", around 4 times but I've never touched any of the other books since the first reading. It wasn't luck A lot of people praised the sequels to Ender's Game, especially Speaker for the Dead, which was a completely different book than Ender's game which I found to be on the same level of depth and sophistication as its prequel. Word economics To express my vast wisdom I speak in haiku's.
Weiser_Cain Posted July 4, 2004 Posted July 4, 2004 It's funny that you put it that way since I repeatedly stopped reading to check the cover to make sure that book was actually part of the series. Yaw devs, Yaw!!! (
EnderAndrew Posted July 5, 2004 Posted July 5, 2004 I think Orson Scott Card is one of the best American authors of all time. His Homecoming series is pretty lack-luster, but just about anything else he has ever written had been fabulous. He wrote a modern version of Sleeping Beauty, I think it was called Enchanted. That was more of the Fantasy genre, and his Alvin Maker series is quite good. It's Historical Fantasy. I loved the Worthing Saga, and I enjoy how many of Card's books don't have black and white villians and heroes. I'm not sure if Card is better than Vonnegut however. And I highly recommend Card's Maps in a Mirror. It's a collection of his short stories. There is a story in there where Card wrote a prequel to Asimov's Foundation series. It's quite good, and draws an interesting point in comparing the two's work. I bought Maps in a Mirror in a big hardcover edition many years ago, but I hear there is a smaller, cheaper trade paperback these days.
Dereth Posted July 5, 2004 Posted July 5, 2004 I think Orson Scott Card is one of the best American authors of all time. I think we figured that "Ender Wiggin" B)
Phosphor Posted July 5, 2004 Posted July 5, 2004 I've only read Ender's Game, which was excellent. I have a copy of Speaker For The Dead" but have yet to read it. Ender's Game was definately a powerful book, and I suspect that it's ending may be one reason why I so loathe manipulation and really see it as betrayal.
Phoenix19-15-5 Posted July 5, 2004 Posted July 5, 2004 Asimov already wrote three prequels to his Foundation series....though they were written many years beforehand. They're called his Space Trilogy or as they were called more recently, The Empire Novels.
Sirus Posted July 5, 2004 Posted July 5, 2004 Meh, I tried to read Ender's Game, but it was pretty mediocre.
Weiser_Cain Posted July 5, 2004 Posted July 5, 2004 I think Elizabeth Moon is a much better author. Yaw devs, Yaw!!! (
EnderAndrew Posted July 6, 2004 Posted July 6, 2004 Ender's Game was originally a short story. Then Card came up with this idea for Speaker of the Dead, but didn't have a protagonist. So, he decided to dust off the idea of Ender, and he effectively wrote the Ender's Game novel as a prologue for Speaker for the Dead. As good as Ender's Game is, the story isn't complete. I think Speaker actually surpasses Ender's Game, and may be one of the best books I've ever read. I've never read Elizabeth Moon, but I just checked her out at Amazon.com to see what she wrote. Most user reviews of her books are negative. Maybe I'll check her out, but from the three plot synopsis' I read on Amazon, all her stuff seemed pretty standard fare sci-fi.
Weiser_Cain Posted July 6, 2004 Posted July 6, 2004 I first read the deed of paksenarrion series. The thing I really like about all her stuff is the sense of authenticity. Even though it's fantasy it never seems like it's just made up. All the characters feel human. I'd reccomend the paksenarrion series first even though it's fantasy, but the 'real' feeling is there in everything I've read so far. I just read some of the reviews, some those people are just being mean, some wanted her to whore it up, some seemed to want her to explore every aspect of her world, if these aren't an absolute necessity to you, read the book. Yaw devs, Yaw!!! (
Maedhros Posted July 6, 2004 Posted July 6, 2004 Frank Herbert is the one I consider the best Science-fiction author, his books are brilliant! Ender's game is on the top of my "Most wanted book" list right now, I think I'll buy it next time I'm in town.
Tigranes Posted July 7, 2004 Posted July 7, 2004 Ender's Game was a great book; his themes weren't nearly as tightly knit and the philosophic speculations were less convincing in his sequels. Of course, then he came up with the idea of writing a parallel series with Bean as the lead, and the first one was pretty much a carbon copy; the two characters are too similar to do a POV thing. Let's Play: Icewind Dale Ironman (Complete) Let's Play: Icewind Dale II Ironman (Complete) Let's Play: Divinity II (Complete) Let's Play: Baldur's Gate Trilogy Ironman - BG1 (Complete) Let's Play: Baldur's Gate Trilogy Ironman - BG2 (In Progress)
JohnDoe Posted July 8, 2004 Posted July 8, 2004 I read the whole Ender's series, and enjoyed them all. The books after Ender's game were a completely different style and I liked that. I always though Ender's Game had enough in it to be seperated into 2 books. The parts after he graduates from the Battle school seemed rushed to me.
EnderAndrew Posted July 8, 2004 Posted July 8, 2004 Going back after several years and rereading things, I do think that there was room to take more time with the series. Card just writes so many different books, that perhaps he doesn't take the time to put out 800 page books like so many other people. He actually tries to be a fairly concise, entertaining storyteller rather than the 800 page novelist.
Archmonarch Posted July 10, 2004 Posted July 10, 2004 Just so you know, OSC is writing the plot for the scifi action rpg Advent Rising coming out later this year. And I find it kind of funny I find it kind of sad The dreams in which I'm dying Are the best I've ever had
Ellester Posted July 10, 2004 Posted July 10, 2004 His Homecoming series is pretty lack-luster, but just about anything else he has ever written had been fabulous. That might explain things for me. I was recommended Card by my brother Life is like a clam. Years of filtering crap then some bastard cracks you open and scrapes you into its damned mouth, end of story. - Steven Erikson
Althernai Posted July 11, 2004 Posted July 11, 2004 Ender's Game was very, very good. Speaker for the Dead was something entirely different and somewhat non-traditional as far as SF goes, but I suppose it was still pretty good (though I didn't like it nearly as much as the original). The rest of the stories in Ender's universe (and I read something like 4 others) were pretty mediocre. I've read some of his short stories about Alvin Maker, and I'm not exactly impressed. They were mildly amusing (perhaps I'm easy to amuse), but nothing special. As far as I can tell, he wrote one really great book and the rest, while sometimes non-traditional, is not nearly as good. I would not rank him with Asimov, Clarke, etc. etc.
Kinbote Posted July 11, 2004 Posted July 11, 2004 I read Ender's Game years ago, and thought it was an entertaining action novel. However, I couldn't understand the extreme devotion many fans have for him, and I haven't been tempted to read any of his other books. I tend to be fairly demanding when it comes to literature, though. I don't give a free pass just because it's science fiction. People like Asimov, Clarke, and Heinlein are extremely intelligent, and good at inventing future sciences (and making them intelligible for the layman), but they are not very talented novelists. Clarke in particular is a weak artist: his prose is clunky and unlovely, his interest in character is nonexistent. The sci-fi writers I most admire (in fact, idolize) are R.A. Lafferty, Jack Vance, and Gene Wolfe. (In my opinion, Wolfe is, along with the non-sf writer Muriel Spark, by far the finest novelist working today.) I also enjoy some of the stuff by Poul Anderson (the awesome Boat of a Million Years), Avram Davidson, and Cordwainer Smith.
EnderAndrew Posted July 12, 2004 Posted July 12, 2004 I know people who immediately dismiss sci-fi as being puip garbage despite having writers like Bradbury, Clarke, Asimov, Vonnegut and the like in the genre. I had a literature professor who refused to acknowledge that there was ever a decent sci-fi book, but then again, she refused to read them. Pity.
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