T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
539.1 | Just my opinion... | NRPUR::MULLAN | I wasn't aware that I *babbled*, sir... | Tue Nov 24 1987 14:53 | 4 |
| I read this book a few years ago, and I did enjoy it very much.
I would recommend it.
-mishel
|
539.2 | thought it was good | CHEFS::LAWSONM | Sic transit gloria mundi. | Fri Nov 27 1987 03:56 | 5 |
| I enjoyed this one too - very much recommended, but then I guess
it will depend on your taste !
Mark Lawson
RGM B1/G3
|
539.3 | I liked it, too. | TARKIN::WISMAR | Zdravstvuytye. | Wed Nov 02 1988 14:48 | 7 |
| This is one that I found quite by accident recently, along with
_Wyrms_. They're both quite enjoyable, I found. Both have the
emotional impact that _Ender's Game_ and _Speaker for the Dead_
had, plus. I wouldn't want to have to choose a favorite Card book....
But I'm looking forward to the next time he comes out with one.
-John.
|
539.4 | Another winner. From what I've read, he's 5-0-0. | TARKIN::WISMAR | Dobry weicz�r. | Thu Nov 17 1988 14:38 | 24 |
| I figured I'd put this here, rather than start a new note:
I just read _Seventh_Son_, by Card, and it was another good one.
It has a sequel out already, _Red_Prophet_, which, if it's in
paperback yet, I'll be reading soon.
Seventh_Son_ is based on the premise of an alternate frontier America,
in which "folk" magic works. Without giving too much away, the mai
characters are Alvin Maker, the seventh son of a seventh son, with
a knack for putting things together, Bill Taleswapper, who has a
knack for getting people to "see" the stories he collects, Alvin
Miller, Alvin Jr.'s father, the Reverend Thrower, and various others.
It seemed as though Card merely scratched the surface of what he
was going to go into in this series. He left a LOT of ends loose.
(This seems different from the other "first book of series" of his
that I read, Ender's Game, which was very complete in itself, I
thought, despite the fact that the only reason, apparently, that
it was published (as a book) was to give the background for Speaker
for the Dead.)
Anyway, the point is, it's a good book, and with all the possibilities
for the sequel, it could be even better.
-John.
|
539.5 | see note #612 | TFH::MARSHALL | hunting the snark | Thu Nov 17 1988 16:38 | 7 |
| re .4
/
( ___
) ///
/
|
539.6 | I didn't like it | TFH::MMARTIN | | Mon May 01 1989 13:40 | 8 |
| "Ender's Game" remains one of my favorite SF books. I read "Speaker
for the Dead" and thought it wasn't as good, but then I've come to
expect that from sequels. I can't remember the name of the 3rd Card
book I read but it contained 'Hart' in the title. I was dissappointed
in that one. After reading "Songmaster" I decided to stop buying his
books.
-Michelle.
|
539.7 | | TCC::HEFFEL | Aliens made me write this. | Mon May 01 1989 23:33 | 13 |
| I don't think that you should condemn Speaker as a sequel.
As I understand it, SftD is the book the OSC wanted to write and
he only wrote EG because his editor(?) (Publisher?) said that the
background was needed for anyone to appreciate/understand SftD.
(Anyone who knows/remebers better, feel free to comment/correct.)
Don't give up on OSC. Try the Alvin Maker books. I think you'd
like them.
tlh
|
539.8 | re .6: Hart's Hope | IOSG::LAWM | Mathew Law (only *one* T), Reading UK | Tue May 02 1989 07:40 | 0 |
539.9 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | I'm the NRA | Tue May 02 1989 09:54 | 6 |
| I made it through two chapters of Harts Hope and threw it
away (actually I gave it to my little sister the space
cadet :-) ). Songmaster was written a few years before
Enders Game.
Is Card still planning to write a third book about Ender?
|
539.10 | As he gets older, he gets better... | SKETCH::GROSS | Human Factors and much, much more. | Tue May 02 1989 13:43 | 9 |
| Re .6:
Don't give up! OSC has had a very steep learning/interest curve
in his writings, but the way his books are being reprinted muddies
it up. _Hart's_Hope_ and _Songmaster_ (and especially that awful
_Wyrms_ thing) are old books, back when his skills were not polished.
Read the Alvin Maker stuff, it's great!
Merryl
|
539.11 | win some lose some ... | BOOKS::BAILEYB | too much of everything is just enuff | Fri May 12 1989 15:23 | 7 |
| RE .10
I'll buy that. I loved Ender's Game. I'm currently reading SftD, and
think it's great. Songmaster did NOTHING for me.
... Bob
|
539.12 | | DWOVAX::YOUNG | Sharing is what Digital does best. | Sun May 14 1989 00:15 | 21 |
| I have recently (in the past 9 months) read all of Card's books
that are in print, and I was struck by 2 things:
1) His later works are definitely much better than his earlier
ones
and
2) Card seems to have this fixation of writing about precocious
nearly-superhuman adolescent boys. Except for "Wyrms" where
he was writing about a prcocious nearly-superhuman adolescent
girl.
This is dressed up better in his later works, but its still there.
If I had to guess, I'd say that all of Card's plots were created
as the result of a 12 year-old's flights of fancy and daydreaming
power-trips. And now years later, that he is a talented writer,
he is just taking those plots of his childhood and building fantastic
stories out of them.
-- Barry
|
539.13 | ...but he still writes a `ripping good yarn'!
| IOSG::LAWM | Mathew Law (only *one* T), Reading UK | Mon May 15 1989 06:15 | 18 |
|
re .12
I've noticed something like that too. Does this apply to Red Prophet
as well, or has OSC run out of his childhood plot-lines? :-)
Something else that I seem to detect in a lot of his stories is a
strong air of `religion'. I don't mean explicit references to
Christianity and so on (as in Seventh Son), but something a bit more
vague - not necessarily related to any particular faith on Earth. Can
anyone tell me what I'm talking about (I can't give any examples off
the top of my head)?
Mat.
*:o)
PS If anyone out there is interested, `Red Prophet' is due to be
released in the UK mid to late June.
|
539.14 | | OASS::MDILLSON | Generic Personal Name | Tue May 16 1989 14:32 | 8 |
| Scott is/was an elder in the Morman church. He also is one of the
most outspoken opponents of unthinking religious fundimentalism
I have ever met. Anyone who has seen Scott's "Secular Humanist
Revival" can attribute to this fact.
I digress. Scott has a very large background in religion, particularly
in the Judeo-Christian area. Since one normally rights about things
one is most familiar with, these subjects are bound to come up.
|
539.15 | | VINO::XIA | In my beginning is my end. | Tue May 28 1991 03:04 | 29 |
| I read Songmaster a few months ago, and from a point of view, the idea of
the story is quite original. Yet much of it suffers from sentimentality.
The characters become emotionally attached to each other at the first sight.
This is at its worst in the middle section of the book. All those tears all
those over blown feelings of love and hate, none of them very convincing.
Perhaps, we should accept the notion that the songbirds can read people's
emotion instantly, hence, fall for a noble character instantly, but it doesn't
work this way with the readers. When reading science fiction, we may easily
suspend our disbelief of certain technical aspects of the plot or even logic,
but we can never accept faked emotion even if the logic is sound (as in this
case). In other words, I can abandon my rational thoughts in order to
believe and identify with the characters in the story, but I am incapable of
believing "fake emotion" even if consistency says I should.
Still I greatly enjoyed reading this book. For the few of us who are deely
into music, this is much closer to reality. Despite the sentimentality, the
songs still brought up some of the feelings I can only obtain when I listen
to some of my favorite music. In fact, every time, a song was described, I
instantly associated with it some music of similar content, and the notes
began to ring in my ears, the sublime music without any of the tear jerking
sentimentality of the book. So while I wouldn't recommend it, I personally
like this book.
Eugene
P.S. So far I have read Ender's Game, Speaker for the Dead and the
Songmaster. The Speaker for the Dead is without any doubt the best of
the three. In fact, the other two do not even come close.
|
539.16 | | SIMON::SZETO | Simon Szeto, International Sys. Eng. | Sun Jun 09 1991 23:07 | 5 |
| re .15: Orson Scott Card was a much more mature and accomplished writer
by the time he wrote _Speaker_For_the_Dead_.
--Simon
|
539.17 | | AIAG::WRIGHT | Anarchy - a system that works for everyone.... | Wed Jun 12 1991 11:44 | 12 |
|
Speaking of Speaker for the dead -
Its sequel, Xenocide, is coming out this fall in hardcover...
at least I think that is its title... :-)
grins,
clark.
ps - the source is my brother, who has one of the galley proofs...
|
539.18 | Due in August from Tor | KRISIS::reeves | Jon Reeves, ULTRIX compiler group | Wed Jun 12 1991 13:26 | 0 |
539.19 | | AIAG::WRIGHT | Anarchy - a system that works for everyone.... | Wed Jun 12 1991 15:22 | 7 |
| RE - due in august -
Its nice to know that my brother is wrong about somethings...he said october...
grins,
clark.
|
539.20 | I wish he'd finish the other series ... | BOOKS::BAILEYB | Let my inspiration flow ... | Wed Jun 12 1991 16:45 | 5 |
| That's great news ... Card is one of my fav's. Now if he'd only finish
the Alvin Maker series ...
... Bob
|