Or.. Why i think child protagonists are a bad idea..

My peers have been urging me to read Enders Game for years, touting it as the Essential Sci-Fi Novel, or proclaiming that it is akin to the bible, but with spaceships. Okay, i made that one up, but yeah - they liked it and they recommended it.
But i didn’t read it. Despite my compulsive and consistent book buying sprees, i’ve struggled to make my way through novels for quite a while. Which is a horrible situation to be in when you grew up ravaging every novel you could find.
It was my birthday some number of months ago, and i was given a book i already owned. So i exchanged it for a couple of others, one being Enders Game (yes, i’m getting back to the point..). So i decided i’d give it a read during the few moments i have sufficient attention span to digest the lovely little words and phrases. Which is generally when i’m on the bus.
I don’t want to review the book, i don’t want to spoil it. But i DO want to talk about the main character - Ender.
Wunderkind Ender is a genius, a trait he shares with his siblings. Unlike his siblings, he’s recruited into the military. It’s made clear to the reader that Ender is exactly what the military is looking for. It’s not so much that we decide it ourselves, more-so that the author tells us with the narration vehicle of staff discussion.
We’re educated with the notion that Ender is a strategic genius, able to lead his fellow students better than anyone ever has. We’re also instantly immediately challenged by the fact that he is nine years old, or thereabouts.
Here’s where my rant begins.
As a generality, i think it’s fair to say that adults have forgotten how it feels to be a child, not to mention the way a child thinks. So writing as a child is challenging to say the least. In the same way as it’s hard for a woman to write as a man, and it’s hard for either to write as an animal. This leads, in my opinion, to the vast majority of child protagonists reading like naive or badly written adults.
In this case, however, we don’t just have a naive adult… We have a naive adult who is better than you. But as the book continues on, you’re left looking for evidence of Enders superiority. Okay so he understands zero gravity, and he’s taught people to bend their legs, sure.. Neither of those are tasks the reader sees as impossibly difficult to achieve. I think i’d do fine in zero gravity, and i think i’d do reasonably well when it comes to tactics in the danger room. So why am i to believe that Ender is such a genius? Is it simply because he can do all these things as such a young age? Well then, surely all the older students are getting great praise too.
I can buy the idea that the reason Ender is so magnificent is that he will get more skilful as he gets older, and therefore has a lot more potential than everyone else. But why does that make me enjoy his character? I’m a comicbook fan, i like my heroes to have obvious and understandable powers. To me Ender was just Hey i’m super smart, well.. for my age, i know it doesn’t impress you much NOW, but it will later!!. Big deal, you’re boring me.
As a contrast, consider the book The Contortionist’s Handbook by Clive Clevenger. The protagonist is explained to the reader as having an excellent grasp on size and perception. He can look at an object and make an accurate assessment of it’s dimensions. He also has a great sense of direction, and can generally tell which direction he’s moving in. These are things i cannot do reliably. I can’t look at a book and tell you its accurate dimensions, or get in a train and realise that it’s moving West. So to me, the character is exceptional.
Ender is not, he’s just confusing. The fact that i was left unconvinced by his “abilities” was made worse by the notion that his siblings were both equally “gifted” (albeit slightly less appropriate)! Three child prodigies in this family you say? Well that’s convenient. If Ender is supposed to be the most gifted child out there, so much so that the possibly successful adult future for Ender is worth more to the military than training older students, then surely his brother and sister would be a lot more desirable than they’re portrayed. Plus their mere existence subtracts from Enders apparent godhood.
I guess what i’m trying to get at is:
- if you’re going to give me a child character - make me believe it’s a child.
- if you’re going to give me a prodigal character - give me reason to believe it’s better than me.
- if you’re going to give me a child prodigy - don’t assume i care about it’s future.
This brief rant exists because too many of my friends love Enders Game, and disagree with me, or just don’t want to hear my criticism.
What did i think of the BOOK?
I really enjoyed Enders Game. I have issues with the way it was written, and issues with the concept. But i enjoyed reading it. Okay so there was a part near the end that made me feel like i was shot in the stomach. Reading through the following pages was like bleeding out on the floor. Then there was a little glimmer of hope which was like seeing the ambulance sirens coming, but it ended up being a disappointment much akin to realising that those flashing lights are just streetlights reflected in the dripping blood.
Oh, am i being overdramatic? You’ve not read the book then. I’m not going to give any events away. Which means i can’t justify my opinions. But yeah, i did enjoy the book. I wasn’t happy with Enders concept, so instead i enjoyed his personality. I did the same thing i did to enjoy His Dark Materials, scaled up the characters age a little in my mind to fit the writing style. I enjoyed some of the other characters, and i enjoyed the sci-fi setting.
I definitely recommend it. Don’t let my opinions taint you, because i’m a weirdo.
Tags: novel, review, sci-fi, writing
Rep:
October 8th, 2007 at 9:38 pm
Wow. Interesting take.
(am going to try to avoid spoilers here, but no promises)
I think a lot of Card fans (myself included. This happens to be one of - if not my favorite - books.) view Ender a bit differently.
Yeah, ok, he is ‘just’ really really smart. And no, you are right - he isn’t super human. But that is, in fact, the point, I think. You say “make me believe it’s a child.” Well, he did - with great accuracy…
I, like a lot of other fans of the Ender series, read it as a kid. Specifically, a geeky 12 year old. And the book captivated me from the first chapter because I totally connected with Ender. I got him. Everything he did, I thought “that is what I would have done.” Ask around - I know for a fact this is the aspect of the story that most other fans were really drawn to.
And the aspects of him that made him “hero” material (like his intelligence) were qualities that I really admired - Brains. Foresight. Cunning. Not rippling muscles. Not a huge sword (though that is cool too…) So this was a kid who I could look up to. It seemed an almost attainable persona.
As to “give me reason to believe it’s better than me” - of course he is better than you (at least, to a young reader). Why? Motive. Ender’s decisions were strangely unmotivated by selfishness, hatred, or pride. He was a survivalist. In the pure sense. He did not posture, boast, or brag. He did not hurt others out of spite. He was a creature of necessity: And that was what made him “better”. He was never motivated by emotions - he was motivated by outcomes.
Which is the very REASON that Peter and Val were poor candidates. Peter was viscous and cruel, and Val was too emotionally weak to do what needed to be done. Ender was the balance point. He was about as Vulcan as you could get without copyright infringement.
But can I see coming to the conclusions you do? Absolutely. I probably would too if I hadn’t read it when I did. In fact, I don’t often recommend it to adults unless I know they can just appreciate the story. It looses some of the magic if you are exposed to it later in life.
But to those of it who read it as kids (and still reread it to this day), it has a deep truth that really changed our lives.
October 9th, 2007 at 11:48 am
Well this is where i disagree. The point i struggle to make is that i didn’t believe in Ender as a child. I was told that he was a child.
Well sure, that’s where it suffers for me. If he’s so brilliant you shouldn’t be thinking “that is what i would have done”, you should be thinking “wow, that’s fantastic”.
I’m not sure the Ender of midway through the book would agree with you there. There are plenty of moments where he is selfish. Plenty of moments of anger, though possibly “hatred” would be too strong a term. There are a few moments where he shows pride too.
As a reader i did not find that believable. If they were so gifted then there would have been a role for them somewhere, not just left to rot in school.
Sure, i can see that, and i did enjoy the story, save for the ending. It just didn’t have the same effect on me, a geeky 24 year old, as it did on you as a geeky 12 year old.