Blog

  • UPDATE: Ender’s Game Bumper Sticker

    UPDATE: Ender’s Game Bumper Sticker

    Sticker

    UPDATE 2: Alright Launchies. I finally got this figured out. The CafePress coupons do NOT work when you buy from my EnderNet store, but the bumper sticker does finally show up in the CafePress Marketplace. The STICKIE coupon no longer works, but they have a new one out today for 40% off valid until 11:59 PT tonight June 6, 2013. Use code BBPD40. (I tried it and it works.) Hopefully eventually the other stuff I added will show up in the Marketplace as well!

    UPDATE: Code has not been working for folks, possibly because the product is too new. I will try again later and let you guys know if it works.

    CafePress is running a special today where you can use the code STICKIE to get a FREE bumper sticker. To help you guys take advantage of this, I’ve set up a bumper sticker using the EnderWiggin.net logo and the tagline “The enemy’s gate is down”.

    To order your FREE sticker, visit the EnderWiggin.net CafePress store (which I just created, so it doesn’t look like much) and order the bumper sticker, checking out with the code STICKIE.

    Please note that you still have to pay taxes and shipping on the item! This promotion ends on June 5, 2013 at 11:59 PM Pacific Time and is valid while supplies last, so order quickly!

  • Aaron Johnston Explains Collaborating with Orson Scott Card

    Aaron Johnston Explains Collaborating with Orson Scott Card

    Aaron-JohnstonHave you been wondering exactly how one co-authors a book with Orson Scott Card?

    No doubt knowing fans have been pondering this question, Aaron Johnston wrote a guest piece for Orbit Books, the UK publisher for the First Formic War series, on that very subject.

    Johnston writes that he knew that if he messed up the books, which documents mankind’s first encounter with the alien race called the Formics, fans would hunt him down and toilet paper his house.

    I do hope that our novels will feel like they belong in the Ender universe. That was my goal from the beginning. “If we do this,” I told Scott, “I want it to feel like an Orson Scott Card novel.” And by that I mean: when fans read the book, I didn’t want them to distinguish between the parts I had written from the parts Scott had written. I wanted it to feel seamless.

    The two of them remained in constant contact after doing the initial brainstorming of the story’s timeline.

    When it finally came time for me to do my portion of the writing, I would write a chapter and send it to Scott, whereupon he would either make some revisions, give notes, or approve the chapter as is.

    We stayed in contact throughout the writing process. We discussed the story almost daily. We invented new characters, threw out parts we agreed weren’t working, took the story in new directions, revised and tweaked, and stuck essentially to the master plan.

    Read his whole editorial here and don’t forget to listen to EnderCast Episode 16 where we interview him and ask this question as well! He’s got a lot to say and we had a great time talking to him!

  • Hi-Res Version of Ender in the Battle Room

    Hi-Res Version of Ender in the Battle Room

    Last week we got a great new image of Ender Wiggin in the Battle Room, presumably it’s his first time in the Battle Room because he’s wearing a yellow helmet, which we’ve all guessed is the official Launchie uniform color.

    Now thanks to a hi-res version of the image, we get a better view of the look on Graff’s face as he watches Ender hang on to the handholds outside the gate. He’s clearly smiling, or at least looking at him with admiration.

    EG-HR

    I didn’t comment much on this last week, but looking at this closer up, I do love the statement this image makes about the “technology” of Ender’s Game because Ender floats just a few feet away from Graff, who is clearly standing in a hallway with gravity.

    Whether or not this is possible at all, I’ll leave up to the people who know science. I still think it lends some cool factor to the world they live in.

    It’s also easier to see the flash suit (click for larger size):

    Flash-Suit

    View the full image below or in the gallery.

    Battle-Room-HR

  • ‘Earth Afire’ Hits Bookstores Today

    ‘Earth Afire’ Hits Bookstores Today

    Earth-Afire-Store

    Those of you that have been eagerly awaiting the release of Earth Afire, the sequel to Earth Unaware, can pick up a copy of the book today.

    One hundred years before Ender’s Game, the aliens arrived on Earth with fire and death. This is the story of the First Formic War.

    Victor Delgado beat the alien ship to Earth, but just barely. Not soon enough to convince skeptical governments that there was a threat. They didn’t believe that until space stations and ships and colonies went up in sudden flame.

    And when that happened, only Mazer Rackham and the Mobile Operations Police could move fast enough to meet the threat.

    You can read my full review of the book here and listen to our interview with co-author Aaron Johnston on EnderCast.

    View the book trailer below:

    Image source: Orson Scott Card on Facebook

  • The Weekly Ender #4

    The Weekly Ender #4

    Here’s the 4th Weekly Ender for you guys! I talk a bit about why I liked Shadow of the Hegemon better than Ender’s Shadow. You’ll have to excuse my not speaking very well for this one but it was so freaking hot I had a hard time concentrating. I don’t know what I’m going to do as we get into summer. -_-

  • VIDEO: Moises Arias Talks to Young Hollywood

    VIDEO: Moises Arias Talks to Young Hollywood

    Moises Arias went to the Young Hollywood studio to talk about his upcoming projects and being called a young Dustin Hoffman. When the conversation switched to Ender’s Game, he said to expect “the doucheyest character ever” (yeah, I have no idea how to spell that either) and that there’s not one ounce of nice in Bonzo. He also mentions again how all the extras were scared of him on set.

    Source: Young Hollywood

  • VIDEO: Viola Davis in ‘Prisoners’ Trailer

    VIDEO: Viola Davis in ‘Prisoners’ Trailer

    Check out Viola Davis (Anderson), in the first trailer for her new movie ‘Prisoners’ which also stars Hugh Jackman and Jake Gyllenhal.

    Synopsis:

    A Boston man kidnaps the person he suspects is behind the disappearance of his young daughter and her best friend.

    Prisoners will hit theaters on September 20, 2013.

    Sadly, I’ll have to skip this one. If there’s one thing I can’t handle, it’s kidnapped kids. Or dead kidnapped kids. Or just dead kids. Shutter Island scarred me for life.

  • Fan-made Friday: Petra and Bean by Zethia

    Fan-made Friday: Petra and Bean by Zethia

    Petra-Bean

    It’s Friday and therefore time for some fan art! Check out this digital drawing of Bean and Petra by Zethia on Deviantart! Technically incorrect since Petra was never in Dragon, but still a great image regardless.

    Since I’m reading Shadow of the Hegemon now, I can appreciate the meaning behind it a whole lot more than I would have last week.

  • EnderCast Episode 16 – Earth Afire

    EnderCast Episode 16 – Earth Afire

    EnderCast

    In anticipation of the release of Earth Afire next week, Kelly and I talked with co-author Aaron Johnston about the book, the series, and his thoughts on book to film adaptations. Topics included:

    • How collaboration works on books in general and how he and Card write these books together
    • Their decision to exit Mazer so early in book 1
    • Aaron’s personal take on movie Mazer’s tā moko tattoos
    • The various versions of the movie script, the long road to production, and the difficulty of film adaptations
    • Aaron’s thoughts on the production team for the movie
    • His reaction to the trailer (he also drops a little bomb on us about the movie!)
    • On why Speaker for the Dead is likely unfilmable

    Listen to the episode here.

  • Moises Arias’ ‘The Kings of Summer’ Out on Limited Release

    Moises Arias’ ‘The Kings of Summer’ Out on Limited Release

    If you live in the LA or NY areas, Moises Arias’ (Bonzo) much talked about film, The Kings of Summer, is out on limited release today.

    The movie, which is about three young boys who run away from home and build a house in the woods, has gained a lot of critical acclaim recently at film festivals. Watch the trailer below and find out where you can get tickets for a wider release next week on June 7.

  • New ‘Ender’s Game’ Still with Graff and Ender in the Battle Room

    New ‘Ender’s Game’ Still with Graff and Ender in the Battle Room

    Battle-Room-Ender-Graff

    Let this be a lesson to me that the next time I hit the snooze button on my phone alarm, I should check email first. Haha!

    Empire Online has just released a new still from Ender’s Game showing Ender in the Battle Room with Graff watching nearby. We get a really amazing look at the gate from the inside along with a better idea at just how massive the Battle Room is.

    Empire spoke with Asa about the Battle Room scenes. Some of it we’ve heard before, some of it we haven’t, including the Battle Room scene he’s most proud of.

    During their training, Ender and his unit take on a lot of other teams in the Battle Room. Any stunts you’re particularly proud of pulling off?

    There’s a really cool sequence where I’m sort of spinning over backwards and I let go of my guns. They’re floating by my side just going along. As I push myself through these two stars, I spin back over and grab the guns, then shoot the people around me. I loved doing that.

    He also mentions that they spent a month and a half filming scenes in the harness, which should be comforting for fans that were concerned by something author Orson Scott Card said last year at a book signing that one scene in the Battle Room is too many.

    Source: Empire

  • Review: Earth Afire: The First Formic War

    Review: Earth Afire: The First Formic War

    EarthAfire2Earth Afire, the sequel to last year’s Earth Unaware, is co-authored by Orson Scott Card and Aaron Johnston and arrived in the mail from Tor last week. Even though I’m still on Shadow of the Hegemon, I cracked it open and started it right away, finishing just a few days later.

    The book picks up right where Earth Unaware left off, with Victor Delgado trying in vain to spread the word of the alien ship rocketing towards Earth. We’re introduced to two new storylines with young little Bingwen in China and finally a storyline focusing on Mazer Rackham. All three of the original storylines (Lem, Wit, and the El Cavador) are present, though El Cavador has split into Victor and the El Cavador survivors. This fragments the novel into six storylines.

    Bingwen is seven years-old and a very bright student, living in a very rural rice growing village in Guongdong Province with his parents and Ye Ye Danwen (his grandfather). His only access to computers is limited to the village library and Bingwen, along with his best friend Hopper and cousin Meilin, are all anxiously awaiting the time when they can take tests to go to school and leave their village for a better life. This all changes once the alien ship arrives.

    Mazer Rackham, who was previously MIA for most of the previous book, re-emerges with his New Zealand SAS team as they head to China to help train their soldiers to use a new type of aircraft called a HERC.

    Having just been given this long assignment overseas, Mazer must make a choice on whether to attempt to start a life with Kim, an American doctor working in New Zealand on a device called the MedAssist, or to break ties with her now to allow her to live a happier life. This felt like rather depressing foreshadowing for choices Mazer would have to make later when he leaves on a ship in order to return to train Ender.

    The story with Lem Jukes continues as Lem races home towards Luna to try to help Earth destroy the alien ship. He struggles internally with his relationship with his father and while it’s clear Lem is sharp-witted, it’s still unclear to me whether Lem is simply blinded by his rocky relationship with his father or if everything he perceives is truly how things stand. Because his desire for control of Juke Limited seems like such an important endeavor, it’s also a bit muddled as to how sincere his motivations are when it comes to the Formics. Perhaps this is simply how he must be as he deals with two major events in the present all while looking to the future.

    The El Cavador storyline continues through Rena Delgado, who has recently lost her husband on the explosion of the El Cavador and has said goodbye to her only son Victor as she sent him off on a long and dangerous mission to Earth. She struggles to keep the women of the ship together in the aftermath of the failed attack on the Formic ship.

    With six storylines, the book does struggle a bit with pacing, ending with interesting cliffhanger chapters that don’t pick back up for many pages. The six do converge into three again after the Formics land in China and begin razing surrounding civilization to the ground.

    Afire

    That being said, Bingwen was a delightful addition to the storyline, and one gets the sense that this young child will be one of or possibly the sole reason why Battle School is eventually formed.

    I am still very confused by Card and Johnston’s choice of focus on Wit O’Toole instead of Mazer’s team in the first novel Earth Unaware. I thought it would be made more apparent why they chose to do this but Wit’s MOP storyline doesn’t appear until around halfway through the book and even then it didn’t seem to merit the attention they were given. You just get dropped straight into Mazer’s storyline without notice, leaving you unfamiliar with and therefore not really caring much about his intimate NZSAS team. In my opinion, these characters would have benefited a lot more from background storytelling while the MOPs journey into China could have appeared without the pages dedicated to them in book 1.

    VAGUE SPOILERS AHEAD

    Overall, Earth Afire was just as good as Earth Unaware, with added action when the Formics land in China and the fight for our planet begins. My main fault with the book lies in the cliffhanger ending, something that as a reader drives me completely up the wall.

    It should be noted that I feel there is a very big difference between an open ending and a cliffhanger ending. With Ender’s Game, we’re given a grand finale and then a sense of closure, yet another door is opened. Harry Potter was very clearly a series of books, but Jo Rowling carefully compartmentalized her novels making sure the reader knew more was to come.

    Earth Afire simply cuts you off just as what you perceive to be the climax is about to begin. It would be like Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince ending just as Harry and Dumbledore set off across the lake full of Inferi. It’s like The Empire Strikes Back fading to black as Luke walks into the dark room to face Vader.

    As a reader, I find this very jarring and frustrating. For that reason I’m almost inclined to recommend that people who haven’t yet picked up this trilogy wait until Earth Awakens is released next year. The books have not disappointed in character and content, but the point at which this book ends leaves a whole lot to be desired.

    Earth Afire will be released on June 4, 2013. Watch the book trailer here.

    This book was sent to me by Tor Books. I was not paid to write this review. The opinions expressed above are my own.

  • Lionsgate Holds Film Rights to 12 Ender Novels

    Lionsgate Holds Film Rights to 12 Ender Novels

    Lionsgate

    In a recent stock analysis story by Variety, it was revealed that Lionsgate holds the rights to all 12 novels in the Ender series.

    Warning, the following quote may cause you to gouge out your eyes.

    A cult favorite among teen boys and young men since its publication in 1985, it’s been described as “Star Wars meets Harry Potter.”

    “While the book on which the film is based is a classic of the genre, we think the film remains a bit of a longshot to achieve breakout success (which we would define as a domestic box office in excess of $125 million) due to some potentially challenging subject matter,” he added.

    It’s been previously stated that the budget for Ender’s Game was around $100 million.

    Harrigan said in his report that “Ender’s Game” has “distinct fanboy and likely general audience appeal” with Lionsgate possibly responsible for 10% to 15% of the production cost. He also noted Lionsgate has rights to all 12 of Card’s “Ender’s Game” series, adding that not all of them are readily adaptable for film.

    I feel I should note that if you haven’t read the book, the original Variety article spoils the ending.

    Thanks to fanette for the news tip!