Ack wrote:Wow, he kept going after I stopped paying attention.
Anyway, from what I've heard, Xenocide and Children of the Mind were originally supposed to be one book, but he just kept going, so that might be what you thinking. Or I could be horribly wrong. Either way, cool beans.
You might be thinking of the Shadows in Flight/Shadows Alive books.
Xenocide and Children of the Mind were always going to be two books, - but I could be wrong as well, lol. There's also another book that just came out, I think it's called Earth Unaware: The First Formic War. It's a Mazer Rackham book, rather than an Ender/Bean book, but it takes place in the Ender-verse. Haven't read it tho.
If you like pre-nutzoid Orson Scott Card, check out the Homecoming series. It's 5 books, the first 4 which are great! The 5th is awful, and better off ignored.
I'm currently reading World War Z, and it seems a lot like Robopocalypse, being that it's all different accounts, relating the entire story. BTW Robopocalypse was pretty good. Kinda simple, but pretty fun to read.
@JT: I started reading Ready Player One and I had to stop. I'm not commenting on the story here, as I never finished the book. I got a couple chapters in and was so annoyed by the overabundance of name dropping. I kept thinking "OK dude, we get it. You grew up in the 80s with a NES and PacMan. Get on with it." It felt like reading this:
"So I got up and turned off my DARTH VADER alarm clock, and pulled back my TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES bedsheets. I checked my email, which was
[email protected]. I got an invitation to my friends 80s party, to which I would obviously attend dressed as VOLTRON. I decided to log into my school account, using my usual password: WHATISTHEMATRIX. After that, I played some DONKEY KONG on my GAMEBOY...."
It's like the guy was just relying on namedropping and nostalgia for people to like his book. I dont know, maybe the story was great, I'm totally not saying "only sheep liked that book", but it just seemed like he set out to drop as many nostalgic names as he possibly could, and succeeded.