Oct 06, 2015 11:36 AM
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The war with the Buggers has been seething for a hundred years, and the mission for the ideal general has been in progress for just about as long. Enter Andrew "Ender" Wiggin, the consequence of many years of hereditary experimentation.
Ender's Game is set in a disarmingly straightfoward science fiction setting: a not so distant future earth undermined by an unfriendly outsider animal groups with better innovation that appears to be resolved than obliterate humankind. The story fixates on a young man who is drafted into an all-devouring military preparing system at 6 years old. The project he's enlisted into tries to produce another era of military commandants out of skilled kids, and it's sole object is to break them at any expense, until they at long last find somebody who can't be broken. What takes after is a candidly complex and now and again horrendously recognizable story of youngsters attempting to acknowledge their internal evil presences.
This book is intriguing, sincerely complex, and morally difficult. It's an effective examination of contention and viciousness, military need, family parts, and the routes in which we utilize the thought of "the other" to legitimize all way of brutality.