Speaker for the Dead
By: Justarius on Dec 31 2008Category: Works
Hundreds of years after the events of Ender’s Game, humanity has found another planet with a sentient race. Someone has been killed, and things are looking grim. Ender wants to make sure humanity doesn’t act rashly and repeat the mistakes of the past. He goes to investigate as “Speaker for the Dead.” By “speaking” the life of the decedent, perhaps he can find out what’s going on and redeem his past sins.
The family soap and the back story are both pretty good, but what I like most is simply the concept of “Speaker for the Dead” – someone who gets to really know the decedent and gives a true account of his or her life. Personally, I would prefer this to a generic, whitewashed eulogy. To truly understand people, you have to look at them in totality – faults included.
Orson Scott Card said that he wrote Ender’s Game so that he could write Speaker for the Dead. This feels very true as Speaker is a much deeper, more developed book. Ender is much more mature, and he is bent on redeeming himself for past sins.
Speaker for the Dead may not be a literary classic, but it delves into similar themes. It’s not your run-of-the-mill sci-fi. Understanding, redemption, and forgiveness are timeless themes found in many great works of fiction, and they are all present in Speaker.
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2 Responses to “Speaker for the Dead”
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I agree that Ender’s way of speaking for the dead is much more appealing than usual eulogies. People can be appreciated just as much, or even more, when their whole lives and struggles are put into view.
This ties in with the heroes article. It’s trendy to deconstruct heroes and to expose their flaws today. Some people feel that this devalues these heroes, making them less worthy of respect and honor. That’s a shame because the world needs more heroes, not less. It should be the opposite - people’s flaws make us appreciate their good qualities even more.