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I just finished rereading Speaker for the first time in about ten years. I was around thirteen years old when I last read it. I'm completely blown away right now by how great of a book it is. It's one of the greatest fiction books I've ever read and I wish everyone in the world would read it.
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Speaker has always been my favorite of Card's books. I came to it a little older than you did, Gaal; my freshman year in college, a friend that I swapped books with gave me a copy of Ender's Game. I read it, and thought that it was okay, but didn't see what the big deal about it was (and, really, I still don't). He told me to give Card one more chance, and said that he'd really only loaned me Ender's Game to give me the backstory necessary to appreciate this other book that was kind of a sequel to it, but picked up with Ender as an adult. I went into it not expecting a whole lot--humoring my friend more than anything--and was just blown away. I proceeded to devour everything Card had written up to that point (except for his plays and Compute! columns).
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I went to the dentist yesterday and was reading my copy of Speaker in the waiting room. The dental hygienest, a girl who looked like she was in her early 20's, saw it and said "Oh! I love that author. Is that book good?"
"Have you read 'Ender's Game?'" I asked her.
"Yes! I love it. I've read it about 20 times!"
"Oh. Then why haven't you read 'Speaker for the Dead' yet? It's the sequel and it's fantastic."
"I have this issue about books. If I really, really like a book, I won't read the rest of the series because I'm afraid I will be underwhelmed."
I had to explain to her that Speaker is incredible and better than Ender's Game in a lot of ways. She was skeptical - and hadn't seen the Ender's Game movie yet for the same reason - but I think I persuaded her. She's lucky to be reading it fresh!
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Haha, she's going to be so disappointed. It's a great book, but it is completely different from Ender's Game. I actually stopped reading it at first because it was so different. It wasn't until I was older, years later, that I was able to approach the story anew and really appreciate it.
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I told her it was a completely different kind of book. She had read "Ender's Shadow" and I told her it was completely different from that too.
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