Now, I've been bitten by a fly... a sci-fi-fly at that. After staying away from new fiction authors for almost two years, I decided to fill in some gaps in my knowledge. I was torn between Orson Scott Card's Ender's Game series, Iain M. Banks' the Culture series and Stephen Baxter's Xeelee Sequence. I had always been a big fan of Ursula K. Le Guin's approach to the cultural and social aspects of societies in a science-fiction setting. After some pondering I ended up starting with Card's "Ender's Game", in part because of it's brevity and also because I really wanted to read the next book, "Speaker for the Dead", but wanted to follow the series in the order the books were published.
So, I devoured the short book with enthusiasm, enjoying Card's plain, almost barren style of telling the story of Ender's youth. I finished the book while travelling, but that didn't stop me from purchasing the sequel with my kindle and continuing without a pause. The reason why I was so interested in "Speaker for the Dead" was that it dealt greatly with sociology and anthropology. One of the questions that persisted throughout the book was how can you study and be in contact with a society (or an individual!), without affecting it and in turn being affected by it and to what extent are impartiality and objectivity objectives that should be pursued. I was also eager to know how Card's imagination and creativity compared to Le Guin's when it came to giving birth to new species and their societies. I was not disappointed and at times I couldn't help but remember the time when I was reading "The Word for World Is Forest" for the first time, even if the approaches and styles of writing were very different.
Before I started reading the series, I hadn't even noticed that a film adaptation of "Ender's Game" is coming out this year. I'm trying hard not get too excited, but at the very least, based on the trailer, we're in for an audiovisual treat. And for the first time since he last played Han Solo in 1983, I think they've actually found a fitting role for Harrison Ford.
Well, as had happened before, I gobbled up the book and was prepared to move right on to "Xenocide". I bought the book and read the first chapter, but for some reason I didn't feel the urge to go on quite yet. So I hopped over to Banks' "Consider Phlebas", the first book of the Culture series. The difference in style and setting was dramatic, but I managed to adapt and found myself enjoying the change. Even if Banks' story is more action packed, it also packs plenty of deeper meanings, some of which are expressed very bluntly.
Experience as well as common sense indicated that the most reliable method of avoiding self-extinction was not to equip oneself with the means to accomplish it in the first place.
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