Ender Wiggin
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Andrew "Ender" Wiggin is a fictional character from Orson Scott Card's science fiction story Ender's Game and its sequels (Speaker for the Dead, Xenocide, Children of the Mind), as well as in the second part of the spin-off series, Ender's Shadow. The book series itself is an expansion of Card's earlier short story "Ender's Game."
The book is set in a fictional universe where Mankind needs to defend itself against alien invaders.
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[edit] Ender's Game
Ender was the youngest of three children at a time of a strict two-child policy, his existence called for by a program aiming to produce commanders for humanity's war against the Formics, or buggers. The generals had noted the exceptional but unusable abilities of his older siblings, Peter (who was originally said to be too aggressive and impossible to cooperate with) and Valentine (who was too kind and willing to compromise). Ender was born astonishingly talented and had a balance of Peter's ruthlessness and Valentine's personality
At the age of six he was sent to the orbital Battle School that trained similar prodigies. He received the same education as other children, but the military had recognized him as their best bet for a supreme commander and often bent or broke its own rules to make sure Ender had not only the necessary skills, but also the right conditioning and character traits for their ends. Specifically, Ender was forced to rely totally on his own abilities, as opposed to resorting to the protection or guidance of adults. To this end, Ender was exposed to great emotional, mental and even physical danger, with the administration forbidden from taking action on behalf of his safety.
Ender breezed through academics, his main interest being the centerpiece of the school: a team-based three-dimensional laser tag in zero-g. He became first a masterful player, then a masterful strategist, and was eventually assigned command of Dragon Army, which became the most successful army in the history of the school. Despite the manipulation from the school's brass, he gathered a close-knit group of friends and acquaintances: namely, Julian "Bean" Delphiki, Alai, Shen, Petra Arkanian, Dink Meeker, Crazy Tom, Hot Soup, Fly Molo, Vlad, Dumper, and Carn Carby.
After graduating several years ahead of time, he was transferred to Command School on Eros. There he trained in interstellar fleet combat with photorealistic holographic simulators. After Ender mastered it in ordinary conditions, the game was changed from one with direct control of ships to one where he relayed commands to others—his friends and associates from Battle School—and by pitting Ender against the seasoned commander, and previous savior of humanity, Mazer Rackham.
With his trusted companions he took on a grueling series of simulated battles, and though they won every one he was pushed to the edge of his sanity and spirit. The final battle was against impossible odds above a simulated planet. Ender finally snapped. He destroyed the planet in the hopes of flunking out for savagery and excessive risk-taking. Only then was he told that, in fact, every 'simulated' battle against Rackham has been real: he had commanded real men, destroyed real fleets, and just now had annihilated the entire Formic race, an event that eventually becomes known as the Xenocide. Though surrounded by jubilant celebration, Ender felt only guilt over his victory.
A colony ship took Ender and his sister, Valentine, to the nearest Formic planet, where he discovered a milieu laid out for him, one taken (evidently telepathically) by the buggers from his dreams and nightmares during Command School. In the heart of the artificial landscape he found a cocoon, containing a single bugger Hive Queen. Thus Ender was entrusted with the future of the race he (almost) drove to extinction. Communicating with the Hive Queen telepathically, he told the story of the Formic race in a short book called The Hive Queen. Later he did the same with his brother Peter, who had since become Hegemon of a united Earth. Both Hive Queen and Hegemon were written with insight and stunning compassion, and they tell their eponymous characters' stories from that person's point of view: who they tried to be, who they wanted to be, why they did what they did. Ender signed these books as Speaker for the Dead, and others were so taken by the idea that they too become Speakers, telling the story of the deceased person's life the way they would have wanted it told.
[edit] Shadow Series
Despite leaving Earth on a relativistic colonization ship after the Formics are destroyed, Ender's legacy lives strongly in both Bean and Peter Wiggin's minds throughout the Shadow series. They continually compare themselves to him, and both emulate him and strive to prove themselves in their own right, apart from any association with him.
Ender does have a brief cameo in Shadow of the Giant, the last of the Enderverse's Shadow series.
Bean also names his son after Ender.
[edit] Speaker Series
Eventually, Ender and Val leave the colony and wander the known galaxy as itinerant Speaker and historian errant, while Ender continually searches for a place to awaken the Hive Queen. This journey takes him eventually to the planet of Lusitania, where he and his loved ones are instrumental (over the next three books in the series) in establishing peaceful relations with another alien species and, eventually, preventing a second xenocide.
Ender in the Speaker series is guilt ridden and reflects on his past often. Although he judges other people by their motives and not their actions, he does the exact opposite to himself. He still exhibits the depth and genius he did in Ender's Game however, as well as his seemingly infinite empathy towards others.
He struggles to redeem himself for the Xenocide he committed in his youth, both by helping the Hive Queen find a world she and her young can live on and by attempting to prevent a second Xenocide.
[edit] External links
- Original "Ender's Game" short story
- Ender's Game page on Card's website with link to first chapter
- "Ender's Game" Movie
Orson Scott Card's Ender's Game series | |
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International Fleet | Admiral Chamrajnagar | Hyrum Graff | Mazer Rackham |
Battle School | Petra Arkanian | Bean | Achilles de Flandres | Bonzo Madrid | Ender's Jeesh | Other Battle School students |
Ender's family | Ender Wiggin | John Paul Wiggin | Peter Wiggin | Theresa Wiggin | Valentine Wiggin |
Other | Han Qing-jao | Si Wang-mu | Jane | Minor characters |
Books | Characters | Concepts |