Customer Reviews
Courtesy of Teens Read Too - By: TeensReadToo.com, 30 Dec 2008 
Where did Ender disappear to after he saved planet Earth from the formics? What happened to Peter & his bid for world domination, to Valentinein Peter's shadow, & to the human race & its government between ENDER'S GAME & SPEAKER FOR THE DEAD?
Finally, Orson Scott Card provides the missing storyin the ENDER series that readers have been waiting for! Card writes with his characteristic straightforward style that, though simple, belies the hidden ethical dilemmas presented to the characters every step of the way. And through it all, the story is as gripping as ENDER'S GAME & will keep you up all night until you reach the book's AWESOME conclusion.
Having saved the world from a race of super intelligent & ruthless fighting formics, Ender is exiled to the far reaches of space under the pretension of governing & developing a new colony for humans on a new planet. As always, the government plays an underhanded gamein sending him off & all his doings, as Earth & its countries are still at war & unsettled after Ender & the other children of his Battle School won the war. Seen as "Earth's most deadly weapon," Ender soon guesses he will never return to Earth, his family, or any semblance of the life he once knew.
Instead, he begins to research his new obsession, the formic race he destroyed. The new colony he is going to is built on an old formic planet, so Ender goes willingly into hyperspace, aging only two years while everyone on Earth ages forty years. Valentine escapes the plans of Peter on Earth to join Enderin space & secretly, Ender is relieved to have someone he can trust. While Ender indulgesin every spec of information on the formics & on the people of his new colony, Valentine waits patiently for Ender to confide his new plans to her while also beginning a series of historical novels on Ender, Battle School, & the Earth wars.
Upon landing on the new colony planet, Ender is hailed as a hero & a welcome source of leadership. He is also confronted with the best discovery he could have asked for - a species of creatures is found deepin a cave, hybrids between formics & a native creature. This is the closest Ender or anyone else has come to studying the actual formics themselves! Through his mental & telepathic communications with these creatures, Ender learns more than he could hope for about the planet & the formics history.
One day, Ender & a native person named Abra go off to explore the planet to find a location for a new colony. On this adventure, Ender discovers the answer to the question he has silently asked himself since he found out the game he played was really a war - "Why did you [the hive queens] let me kill you?"
The truth is more exciting than I can spoil for anyone who has breathlessly awaited this novel.
As always, Orson Scott Card intertwines the story of emerging governments, political struggle, & personal & moral dilemmas as the story of Ender unfolds. Kudos to him for not only continuing a series for over twenty books, but for doing so with inventiveness, brilliant writing, & a compelling story.
Reviewed by: Erikka Adams, aka "The Bookbinder"
Well worth the read if you're a fan of the series - By: Stelhan Ariyadasa-saez, 29 Nov 2008 
...Spends more time winding up loose plot threads than it does actually spinning story. Being sandwiched inbetween two chapters of Ender's Game, for the most part, that's somewhat unsurprising, perhaps, but it really doesn't move the story on at all.
Essential if you follow the series, & care about what happens to character like Graff. Fillsin the gap at the end of Ender's Game wonderfully.
Just don't expect it to stand on its own merits.
Strictly for fans of the series. Also completely incomprehensible if you haven't read the "Shadow" saga.
That said, I've enjoyed it. Genuinely worth the read. Wish it had a little more story, but that's for Shadowsin Flight to wind up, I suppose.