Earth Awakens (The First Formic War, 3)
Earth Awakens (The First Formic War, 3) book cover

Earth Awakens (The First Formic War, 3)

Hardcover – June 10, 2014

Price
$22.11
Format
Hardcover
Pages
400
Publisher
Tor Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0765329066
Dimensions
6.35 x 1.27 x 9.47 inches
Weight
1.32 pounds

Description

From Booklist In volume three of the the First Formic War series—a prequel series set a century before Card’s classic Ender’s Game—the alien invaders have landed on Earth. Mazer Rackham and his Mobile Operations Police comrades pull off a high-risk mission to stop the mass slaughter in China. Meanwhile, in space, Victor Delgado, who risked his young life in the first novel in the series (Earth Unaware, 2012) to warn Earth of the impending invasion, is risking it again, this time by infiltrating a Formic vessel and trying to find a way to neutralize the alien creatures. But has he been set up by Lem Jukes, the conniving son of a mining-company president who’s feeling mistreated by his powerful father? With a nice balance of violence and political machination, the novel will definitely please readers of the first two books in the series—a series that, it should be pointed out, isn’t merely a spin-off of Ender’s Game and its numerous sequels. Even if there had been no Ender’s Game, the First Formic Wars novels would still pack the same considerable wallop. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Card remains among the biggest names in contemporary science fiction, and his latest will be published to a legion of eager fans. --David Pitt “The sections that feature highly intelligent, self-reliant children--Card's trademark--are as excellent as ever; elsewhere there's plenty of solid action, well-developed characters….Another solidly engrossing installment, where the aliens are really just a sideshow: What we're witnessing is how and why Ender's child armies came to be.” ― Kirkus Reviews on Earth Afire “While the reader knows who wins the war, the fate of the engaging characters in this story is up in the air. Thirty-five years after he introduced Ender to the world, it's great to see that Orson Scott Card is still making magic in this imaginative world.” ― New York Journal of Books on Earth Afire “The pacing and the vivid action scenes will satisfy hard-core military-SF buffs. At the same time, the characters and the ethical foundations under them are at the high level we have come to associate with Card. Laying their own foundations under Card's Ender Wiggins saga, the Formic Wars promise to add to Card's already high reputation and to his collaborator's as well.” ― Booklist, starred review on Earth Afire “Card and Johnston explore human ignorance and compassion through a tapestry of galactic warfare in the second volume of the Formic Wars trilogy.... Social upheavals and political ineptitude are realized through rich characterization and brisk action.” ― Publishers Weekly on Earth Afire Orson Scott Card is best known for his science fiction novel Ender's Game and its many sequels that expand the Ender Universe into the far future and the near past. Those books are organized into the Ender Saga, which chronicles the life of Ender Wiggin; the Shadow Series, which follows on the novel Ender's Shadow and is set on Earth; and the Formic Wars series, written with co-author Aaron Johnston, which tells of the terrible first contact between humans and the alien "Buggers." Card has been a working writer since the 1970s. Beginning with dozens of plays and musical comedies produced in the 1960s and 70s, Card's first published fiction appeared in 1977--the short story "Gert Fram" in the July issue of The Ensign , and the novelette version of "Ender's Game" in the August issue of Analog . The novel-length version of Ender's Game , published in 1984 and continuously in print since then, became the basis of the 2013 film, starring Asa Butterfield, Harrison Ford, Ben Kingsley, Hailee Steinfeld, Viola Davis, and Abigail Breslin. Card was born in Washington state, and grew up in California, Arizona, and Utah. He served a mission for the LDS Church in Brazil in the early 1970s. Besides his writing, he runs occasional writers' workshops and directs plays. He frequently teaches writing and literature courses at Southern Virginia University.He is the author many science fiction and fantasy novels, including the American frontier fantasy series "The Tales of Alvin Maker" (beginning with Seventh Son ), and stand-alone novels like Pastwatch and Hart's Hope . He has collaborated with his daughter Emily Card on a manga series, Laddertop. He has also written contemporary thrillers like Empire and historical novels like the monumental Saints and the religious novels Sarah and Rachel and Leah . Card's work also includes the Mithermages books ( Lost Gate , Gate Thief ), contemporary magical fantasy for readers both young and old. Card lives in Greensboro, North Carolina, with his wife, Kristine Allen Card. He and Kristine are the parents of five children and several grandchildren. AARON JOHNSTON is the coauthor of The New York Times bestselling novels Earth Unaware , Earth Afire , and other Ender's Game prequel novels. He was also the co-creator and showrunner for the sci-fi series Extinct , as well as an associate producer on the movie Ender’s Game . He and his wife are the parents of four children. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Earth Awakens The First Formic War Volume Three of the Formic Wars By Orson Scott Card, Aaron Johnston Tom Doherty Associates Copyright © 2014 Orson Scott Card and Aaron JohnstonAll rights reserved.ISBN: 978-0-7653-2906-6 Contents Title Page, Copyright Notice, Dedication, 1. Code, 2. Glow Bugs, 3. Drones, 4. Gravity, 5. Alliance, 6. Reinforcements, 7. Dozers, 8. Secrets, 9. Goo Guns, 10. Shield, 11. Options, 12. Rena, 13. India, 14. Dragon's Den, 15. Reunion, 16. Holopad, 17. Cocoons, 18. Soldier Boy, 19. Despoina, 20. Train, 21. Strike Team, 22. Nozzles, 23. Casualties, 24. Landers, 25. International Fleet, 26. Kim, 27. Belt, Epilogue, Acknowledgments, About the Authors, Copyright, Tor Books by Orson Scott Card, CHAPTER 1 Code Changing the course of a war for the survival of the human race doesn't often come to anyone, but it's especially rare for eight-year-olds to have the opportunity. Yet when Bingwen saw that it was within his grasp, he didn't hesitate. He was as respectful of authority as any child could be — but he was also keenly aware when he was right, and those in authority were either wrong or uncertain. Uncertainty was what surrounded Bingwen now, in a barracks building of an abandoned military base in southeast China. The men around him were Mobile Operations Police — MOPs — and Bingwen knew that, as an eight-year-old Chinese boy, he was only with them because Mazer Rackham had adopted him. How long would they allow him to remain with them, now that Mazer Rackham was gone? Gone and probably dead. Bingwen had seen plenty of death since the Formics first began spraying the fields of his homeland with a gas that turned all living tissues, plant and animal, into rotting jelly, breaking down into their constituent organic molecules. Turning back into fertile soil. A vast compost heap, ready for whatever the Formics intended to plant in their place. The Formics killed indiscriminately. They slew harmless people at their labors, terrified people fleeing from them, and soldiers firing at them, all with the same implacable efficiency. Bingwen had seen so much death he was glutted with it. He was no fool. He knew that just because he needed Mazer Rackham to be alive did not mean that the Formics would not kill him. Here's why he was so certain that Mazer was alive: The team had succeeded in its mission. The plan was good. And if something had gone wrong, Mazer was the kind of resourceful, quick-thinking soldier who would see a way out and lead his men through it. Whether he was the commander or not. That was what Bingwen had learned from watching Mazer Rackham. Mazer wasn't the leader of the MOPs team. But the MOPs soldiers were trained to think for themselves and to listen to good ideas no matter whether they came from leaders, eight-year-old Chinese orphans who happened to be very, very good with computers, or a half-Maori New Zealander who had been rejected for MOPs training on the first go-round but who persisted until he practically forced his way onto the team. Mazer Rackham was with the MOPs in China only because he was the kind of man who never, never, never gave up. I'm going to be that kind of man, too, thought Bingwen. No. I am that kind of man. I'm small, young, untrained as a soldier, and as a child I'm someone these men expect to protect but never listen to. But they never expected to listen to Mazer Rackham, either, never expected him to be one of them. I'm going to find him, and if he needs saving I'm going to save him, and then he can go back to taking care of me. Bingwen had been watching the monitor with the rest of them, when the lens on the barracks roof showed the impossibly bright flare of the nuclear explosion, followed by the mushroom cloud. They all knew what it meant. The team consisting of Captain Wit O'Toole, Mazer Rackham, and Calinga had succeeded in piloting their Chinese drill sledges under the impenetrable shield that surrounded the lander, and then set off the nuclear device. If they had not reached their objective, they wouldn't have set off the nuke. But did they set it off as planned, with a timer that allowed them time to dive back into the earth on their drill sledges and get clear of the blast zone? Or did they set it off as a suicidal act of desperation, barely managing to do it as the Formics prevented them from getting away? That was the uncertainty that filled the barracks now, six hours after the explosion. Should they wait for O'Toole, Calinga, and Rackham to return? Or should they assume they were dead and go forward to try to assess the effectiveness of the attack? Bingwen would be useless on such a reconnaissance mission. His radiation suit had been designed for a small adult, which meant it hung on Bingwen's eight-year-old frame like an oversized sleeping bag. He had scrunched up the arms and legs in order to reach the feet and gloves, but the accordion effect forced him to stand bowlegged and waddle when he walked. When it was time for the MOPs to leave the barracks, Bingwen would be left behind — and they would be right to leave him. Meanwhile, though, Bingwen was useful for the only kind of recon that was possible right now — by radio and computer. All the MOPs were trained on all their hardware, and were very good at improvising with whatever was at hand. They had antennas on the roof as soon as the explosion was confirmed, as well as a small sat dish. Already they were getting confirmation from their own sources in faraway places that all Formic activity around the nuked lander had ceased. What Bingwen was good for was monitoring the Chinese radio frequencies. As the only native speaker of the southern Chinese dialect and the best speaker of the official Mandarin tongue, Bingwen was the one most likely to make sense of the fragments of language they were picking up. And even as he listened, he was using one of the holodesks they had found at this base to scan the available networks to see what was being said among the various Chinese military groups. Anything official, any orders from central command, would be encoded. Anything not encoded was likely to be of the "What's happening? Who set off that explosion? Was it nuclear?" variety — questions to which MOPs already knew the answers. But Bingwen was deft at finding his way into computer networks that didn't want to admit him. The computer he was using was in the office where official communiqués would have been received. The computer had been wiped before being abandoned, but it wasn't a real wipe, it was just a superficial erasure. They had left in a hurry and who did they expect to come in after them? Formics — and Formics completely ignored human computers and other communications, that was well known. So the computer wipe had been cursory, and it had taken Bingwen only a few minutes to unwipe everything. That meant that while Bingwen couldn't possibly decode anything himself, the decoding software was in place, and after several false starts and reboots he had managed to get in using the password of a junior officer. Unfortunately, the junior officer had been so junior that he was only able to decode fairly routine messages, which meant that Bingwen had to labor under the same restrictions. Routine encoded messages were still a huge step up from panicked queries and radio rumors, so while Bingwen continued to listen to the radio chatter that the MOPs operatives were locating for him, he opened message after message as each emerged from the decoding software. Finally he found something useful. "Deen!" he called out. Deen, an Englishman, was acting CO in O'Toole's absence. Everyone knew Bingwen would not have called out to him for anything less than definitive information. So it wasn't just Deen who came, it was everyone who was not actively engaged in an assignment at the moment. Naturally, the computer message was in Chinese, so nobody could read over Bingwen's shoulder. Still, he ran his fingers along the Pinyin text as he interpreted on the fly. "Two soldiers in MOPs uniforms," said Bingwen. "Held at General Sima's headquarters." "So the Chinese are taking them seriously," said Lobo. "Sima's the big guy." "Sima's the guy who had absolutely no interest in cooperating with MOPs," pointed out Cocktail. "So they're alive," said Bolshakov, "but they've been taken to the guy who is most likely to resent their presence here." "Two soldiers," said Deen. "Not three." They all knew that meant that either one of the team had been a casualty during the operation, or three had made it out alive but only two had been taken by the Chinese. By now the decoder had spat out two more messages, and one of them was a follow-up that contained names. "Prisoners identified as O'Toole and Rackham," said Bingwen. "Have they contacted our people at all?" asked Deen. "Are there negotiations going on for release?" Bingwen scanned the message. "No. Sima's people are reporting that they have them, but nothing else. They're not asking what to do with them, and they're not reporting what they plan to do." "Sima wouldn't ask anybody, and nobody would have the gall to make suggestions," said Bolshakov. "Even at the highest levels of the civilian government, they tread lightly when they're dealing with Sima." Silence for a few moments. "Extraction would be a bad idea," said Deen. "But all the other ideas I can think of are worse." "Even if we can figure out exactly where Sima's base is, we won't know how to get in," said ZZ. "Or out again." "I just love winging it in the middle of foreign military bases," said Lobo. "And when we succeed in getting them out," said Deen, "we will have alienated one of the most powerful men in the Chinese military, right when we ought to be getting credit for saving millions of Chinese lives." "I have an idea," said Bingwen. He waited for them to dismiss him, to tell him to be quiet, to remind him that he was a child. He expected this because it's what adults always did. But they were MOPs. They listened to anybody who might have useful intelligence or offer alternative plans. Bingwen began to type into a message window. He was writing in Pinyin, because that was his native language, but he translated as he went. "MOPs team headed by Captain Wit O'Toole gives all honor and thanks to glorious General Sima for providing MOPs with drilling sledges to carry MOPs nuclear device under Formic defenses." "We didn't get the sledges from Sima," said Cocktail. "We got them in spite of his opposition, didn't we?" said Bolshakov. "Let the kid write in peace," said Deen. Bingwen was still typing, interpreting into English as he went. "All credit to glorious General Sima of People's Liberation Army for coming up with plan to destroy Formic lander from inside. All thanks to him for allowing MOPs soldiers to have great honor of carrying out his plan using nuclear device General Sima requested. Proud to report complete success of nuclear venture. Surviving MOPs soldiers have returned to General Sima to report complete success of his brilliant and daring plan." "What a pack of crap," said Bungy. "Brilliant crap," said Deen. "Crap that might get the Captain and Rackham out of jail." "This little orphan boy is playing international politics better than most grown-ups," said Bolshakov. "Don't ask Sima anything, don't beg, don't extract. Just give him all the credit and announce to everybody that our men are in his headquarters. He's not going to deny any of this. We did this without his consent and it worked, but by giving him credit for it we take away all his embarrassment and give him every incentive to treat our guys like heroes." "I wrote it in Chinese because I know how to make it sound formal and proper," said Bingwen. "But now I need somebody with better English to write it so it will sound right in the international version." For the next fifteen minutes, Deen and Bolshakov helped Bingwen make a credible sentence-by-sentence translation into credible English that sounded as if it might be the original from which Bingwen's announcement had been translated. Meanwhile, ZZ and Cocktail came up with a recipient list that included high Chinese government offices, MOPs' own headquarters, and news nets around the world. "One more thing," said Deen. "Sign Captain O'Toole's name to it." "He won't like that," said ZZ. "He'll love it, if it gets him away from the Chinese," said Deen. A few moments later, Deen reached down into the holodisplay and twisted send. "If this doesn't work," said Cocktail, "we can still go in and kill a lot of people and drag our guys out like in an action movie." "What Cocktail is saying," ZZ translated to Bingwen, "is that if this works, you saved a lot of people's lives and got us out of a jam." What Bingwen was thinking was: Mazer wasn't killed by the nuke or the Formics, and maybe I just saved him from the Chinese. CHAPTER 2 Glow Bugs Victor cut into the Formic ship knowing full well that he would likely never come out again. There were simply too many variables beyond his control, too many unknowns. What was beyond the metal wall in front of him, for example? A squadron of Formics waiting with weapons drawn? An automated security system that would incinerate him the moment he stepped inside? He had no way of knowing. The ship was the largest structure he had ever seen, bigger even than most asteroids his family had mined in the Kuiper Belt. And every square meter of it inside was a mystery. How could he possibly find the helm and plant the explosive if he had no idea where the helm was located? There might not even be a helm, for that matter. And even if there was, how could he reach it undetected? He pushed such thoughts out of his mind and focused on the wall in front of him, turning his head from left to right so that the beams of light from his helmet could illuminate its surface and show him every detail. He had reached a dead end, or more accurately the bottom of the hole he had climbed into, a hole on the side of the ship so deep and dark and narrow that it reminded him of the mine shafts his family had dug into asteroids. Pajitas por las piedras, Father had called them. Straws through the rock. Father. The thought of him was still like a knife inside Victor. Even now, weeks after learning of Father's death, Victor still couldn't fully grasp the idea. Father was gone. The one constant in Victor's life, the one unshakable foundation Victor had always clung to was gone. It was Father who had always been the steady voice of reason during a family crisis. If there was a mechanical breakdown on the ship, for example, if life-support was failing, Father never panicked, he never lost faith, he never doubted for an instant that a solution could be reached, even when Victor saw no possible outcome. Father's calm, set expression of absolute confidence seemed to say, We can solve this, son. We can fix it. And somehow, despite the odds against them, despite having hardly any replaceable parts, Father had always been right. They had fixed it, whatever it was, a busted coupler, a faulty water purifier, a damaged heating coil. Somehow, with a bit of luck and ingenuity and prayers to the saints, Victor and Father had set everything right again. The solution was rarely pretty — a jury-rigged, make-do repair that would only last them long enough to reach the nearest depot or weigh station — but it was always enough. And now that pillar of confidence was gone, leaving Victor feeling untethered from the only anchor he had ever known. A voice sounded in Victor's earpiece. "Are you sure you want to go through with this, Vico?" It was Imala. She was outside in the shuttle, hovering a few hundred meters from the Formic ship. She and Victor had flown the shuttle from Luna, moving at a slow, drifting pace so as not to alert the Formics' collision-avoidance system. Victor was now sending her a live feed from his helmetcam. "If you want to pull out now, I won't think any less of you," said Imala. "You said it yourself, Imala. We can't sit idly by. If we can do something, we should do it." She knew the risks as well as he did, and yet she had insisted on accompanying him. "We don't know what we're getting into," said Imala. "I'm not saying we shouldn't help. I'm saying we should be certain. If you start cutting there, there's no turning back." "This is the only place I can cut, Imala. I can't cut through the hull outside. It's covered with those plate-sized apertures, any one of which could open while I'm hovering above it and unleash laserized material directly into my handsome face. Cutting out there would be like cutting into the barrel of a loaded gun." "Keep telling yourself your face is handsome and it might come true," said Imala. Victor smiled. She was making light, breaking up the tension like Alejandra used to do. Alejandra, his cousin and dearest friend back on his family's ship, El Cavador. She and Victor had teased each other like this constantly. She, telling him that he was knobby kneed or laughing at him for squeaking like a girl whenever she or Mono had jumped out of a hiding place and startled him. And he, mimicking her whenever he caught her humming while she worked. Hers were pleasant little melodies that seemed to sway back and forth like a swing. "What are you humming about anyway?" he had asked her once. "What's so pleasant about doing the laundry?" "I'm telling myself a story," she had said. "A story? With hums? Stories require words, Janda." "The story is in my head, genius. The humming is ... like the soundtrack." "So you're telling yourself a story and making up the music while you're washing other people's clothing. You're quite the multitasker, Janda. And these stories, let me guess, they're about a handsome, teenage mechanic who can fix anything and build anything and smells as sweet as roses." (Continues...) Excerpted from Earth Awakens by Orson Scott Card, Aaron Johnston . Copyright © 2014 Orson Scott Card and Aaron Johnston. Excerpted by permission of Tom Doherty Associates. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • The story of The First Formic War continues in
  • Earth Awakens
  • .
  • Nearly 100 years before the events of Orson Scott Card's bestselling novel
  • Ender's Game
  • , humans were just beginning to step off Earth and out into the Solar System. A thin web of ships in both asteroid belts; a few stations; a corporate settlement on Luna. No one had seen any sign of other space-faring races; everyone expected that First Contact, if it came, would happen in the future, in the empty reaches between the stars. Then a young navigator on a distant mining ship saw something moving too fast, heading directly for our sun.When the alien ship screamed through the solar system, it disrupted communications between the far-flung human mining ships and supply stations, and between them and Earth. So Earth and Luna were unaware that they had been invaded until the ship pulled into Earth orbit, and began landing terra-forming crews in China. Politics and pride slowed the response on Earth, and on Luna, corporate power struggles seemed more urgent than distant deaths. But there are a few men and women who see that if Earth doesn't wake up and pull together, the planet could be lost.THE ENDER UNIVERSE
  • Ender series
  • Ender’s Game
  • /
  • Speaker for the Dead
  • /
  • Xenocide
  • /
  • Children of the Mind
  • /
  • Ender in Exile
  • /
  • Children of the Fleet
  • Ender’s Shadow series
  • Ender’s Shadow
  • /
  • Shadow of the Hegemon
  • /
  • Shadow Puppets
  • /
  • Shadow of the Giant
  • /
  • Shadows in Flight
  • The First Formic War (with Aaron Johnston)
  • Earth Unaware
  • /
  • Earth Afire
  • /
  • Earth Awakens
  • The Second Formic War (with Aaron Johnston)
  • The Swarm
  • /
  • The Hive
  • Ender novellas
  • A War of Gifts
  • /
  • First Meetings

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
60%
(2K)
★★★★
25%
(825)
★★★
15%
(495)
★★
7%
(231)
-7%
(-231)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

Promising Plot, Horrible Writing

This book had the makings of a good read, given an interesting plot. But the writing is just horrible. I can't believe this is Orson Scott Card's work. He was certainly better than that in earlier Ender books, in the Alvin Maker series, and others.

The science is just plain silly, as others have commented. The Formics have interstellar travel, but sailing ship wheels to turn. Vico knows how every control on the Formic ship works even though he spent all of two hours on it, operating none of them, and the Ansible should make all controls un-necessary.

The dialogue is wooden. Lem Jukes is a predictable two-dimensional character who can't relate to his father, nor accept a single compliment his father gives him. He looks for the cloud in every silver lining. The romance scenes are laughable pre-teen material.

I'll keep reading these because I've committed to the series, but I beg Card to go back to writing them himself, or get a better ghostwriter.
22 people found this helpful
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to the point that I feel like it was intentionally stretched out so that the book ...

Card has complex characters and a complicated, yet follow-able plot as always. The pace seems a bit slow at times, to the point that I feel like it was intentionally stretched out so that the book series was 3 books long when it easily could have fit into 2 books.

I also have a problem with Card's tendency to make children super-intelligent. One of the main characters in this trilogy is an 8-year old boy who speaks, thinks, and acts like a 30-year old genius. I think of my kids when they were 8 years old and as smart as they are, there's no way they'd think or act like said character does. I know part of it is to advance the plot and the reader must provide some willing suspension of disbelief, but it goes way too far in my opinion.
8 people found this helpful
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Unbelievably bad!

This book is so bad I just have to write a review. The first two books in the trilogy were pretty good with character and plot development plus a lot of tension. This one had lame characters, lame plot, and zero tension. The action sequences consisted of the characters talking about what they were going to do, and then the next scene basically saying they did it with no hiccups in the plan, and then they move on to the next scene. Boring. The ultimate ripoff was the end which bore no semblance to the Ender's Game account of the first formic war. In EG, Ender repeatedly watches the vids to see how Mazer flew his ship in the battle and eventually flew it into the mother ship, whereupon all the formics on earth dropped dead at once. The big mystery in EG was what happened inside that ship and why did the Formics just drop dead. Remember that? Well in this book Mazer wasn't presented as a fighter pilot and wasn't even in the air during the final battle. Huh? The ending was already pre-written for them in EG, whey didn't they use it?
5 people found this helpful
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Underage Boy Saves World, Part II (was that 2 or eleven? who cares?)

The story opens with witty repartee between two friends, only it isn't very witty.

We meet an eight year old who can plan rings around the Chinese captain, and the Irish-American prisoner who explains to the captain how he can save face by ... not killing his prisoners. Because the Chinese captain made it to captain without ever thinking about politics, right?

Within the first half of a book we have the threat of a false rape accusation. Later we have a guy seduce his rich father's secretary so she'll give him information about the business - and he calls it all innocent conversations. When he finds out that the secretary was innocently repeating conversations to her boss, he decides she's a prostitute his father hired to trick him into thinking he was really getting information. Holy cow, I hope none of his own employees stay loyal to him, the prostitutes!

Mazer Rackham the Maori learned his religion from his mother. When she died, his father rejected her religion and so did young Mazer, until he was a prisoner and realized that hey, there are no atheists in the foxholes. Tra la, the religion he never thought about as an adult saved his sanity.

All is not lost! At the last minute, a non-white woman shoots down the bad guys, so this book is totally not racist or sexist. At all. At any point. Really.
3 people found this helpful
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It's a knockoff copy if you knew this then it's ...

It's a knockoff copy if you knew this then it's no problem but if you expected the book for that price you will not get it you'll get a book half the size it with inferior page quality
2 people found this helpful
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Most reviews are four and five stars, so why are the few negative reviews on top?

Great book, great series. Card is building a believable prequel series that explains all the questions we had about the Formics, their motivations, and how everything went terribly wrong. Card's strong suit has always been world building and intertwining story arcs, and both of these qualities are on full display here. I cannot wait for the rest of the books in this series and the Second Formic War.

I'm giving this five stars. And as you'll see most of the reviews here are four or five stars. Yet somehow, all the negative reviews are on top. I can't help but think there are people coming on here and voting up the few negative reviews as a protest against Card's political views. So don't listen to them.
2 people found this helpful
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A "False Flag" attack on your expectations of Orson Scott Card.

Over the years since Ender's Game Mr Card's writing has declined sharply, either that or his contribution to this work is little more than his name and smiling face on the back cover. The plot line is a flatline, character development is paper cut outs, the ah-ha moments are oh-well moments, and the science......This is a glorified "Dick and Jane meet space monsters, kill some and go home". I went back to my old copy of Ender's Game just to confirm my suspicions, you can do the same of course, but you certainly find better sci-fi for your money. If I could give no stars or better negative votes I would. Worse, I read this one first, there are two books before this. Unbelievable!!!
2 people found this helpful
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Totally Boss and Amazing Ending

An amazing book, and a great way to end the series. I loved these books, and i was very pleased with this last one. I loved the characters, and their roles in the story. I absolutely loved the final battle. Most final battles are not very long. The final battle in this book was epic, and it was 51 pages long!!! I have not read many books with this long, or intense of a finishing battle.
I highly recommend this book, and it is in my top ten list.
2 people found this helpful
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Hitting Back

Earth Awakens (2014) is the third SF novel in the First Formic War series, following [[ASIN:0765367378 Earth Afire]]. The initial volume in this sequence is [[ASIN:076536736X Earth Unaware]].

In the previous volume, Victor was hospitalized due to his extreme malnourishment and bone loss. He was impatient with the lack of response to his news. Imala said that twenty thousand people had believed his video of the aliens. Vico said that was less than a drop in the bucket.

Bingwen was one of the people who believed the video. The alien was too realistic to be a fake. Yet all the adults and most of the children believed it to be a spook video. Bingwen and his grandfather buried some necessities just in case.

Victor had an appointment with Imala's superior. She thought that victor was a menace to society, but had passed on his data to a contact at the Space Trade and Security Authority. Vico was encouraged, but Imala had discovered that the STASA contact was only a low level staffer.

Imala arranged for Victor to escape from the hospital. She took him to some astronomers she knew in the Juke organization. They arranged a face-to-face conversation with Ukko.

In this novel, Victor Delgado was a spaceborn human living on the spaceship El Cavador. After the alien spaceship arrived, Vico was sent to Luna on a quickship to warn Earth.

Imala Bootstamp was an auditor for the Lunar Trade Department. She interviewed Vico upon his arrival on Luna. She believed Vico's news about the alien ship.

Lemminkainen Joukahainen is the captain of the Makarhu, a Juke Limited research vessel. Lem is the son and heir of Ukko Jukes, owner of the company.

Benyawe has a doctorate in physics and now leads the research team. She has been with Lem's father for years.

DeWitt Clinton O'Toole is a Captain of the Mobile Operation Police. Wit's unit is a small, elite international peacekeeping force.

Mazer Rackham is a Lieutenant in the New Zealand Special Air Service. He has only been in the NZSAS for five months.

Sima is a General in the Chinese Peoples Liberation Army. He is not very pleased with the MOPs destruction of a Formic lander without permission of the PLA.

Shenzu is a PLA Captain. He had worked with Mazer when the NZSAS taught the PLA how to fly HERC antigravity craft.

Bingwen is an eight year old Chinese schoolboy. Bing has studied English to qualify for higher education.

In this story, Vic and Imala have drifted next to the Formic ship. Vico cuts his way inside while Imala monitors his suit and video feed. Vico finds his way into a tunnel inhabited by alien bugs.

He works his way toward one end of the tunnel. On his way, he encounters a Formic worker pulling a cart, but the worker is wearing blinders and doesn't see him. At the end of the tunnel, Vico discovers a cargo hull filled by the wreckage of human ships.

Back on Luna, Lem learns of the construction of glaser equipped drones. Ukko plans to launch them against the Formic mother ship. Then Benyawe asks Lem why he hasn't mentioned the drones to her. She has some doubts that the drones will function as well as Ukko expects.

Then Lem discovers that the drone launch date has been moved up and they will probably hit the Formics while Vico and Imala are at the mother ship. Lem searches for his father, but his access to the data network has been reduced to less than a new employee. Finally he locates his father and asks that the launch be delayed.

Ukko says that the drones have already been launched. He urges Lem to cut communications with Imala and Vico. They are certain to die and Ukko considers it a mercy to let them die unaware.

Imala urges Vico to return to the shuttle, but Vico believes there is more to discover. He watches the workers for a while and moves closer to the exit tunnel. Then the drones attack the Formic ship.

Their glasers cause a gravity pulse that hits the Formic cargo bay. The gravity waves snatch Vico away from his hiding place. He starts to fall into the wreckage within the cargo bay.

The Formic ship picks off the drones and starts repairing the damage. Vico works his way toward the stern of the ship. He sees Formics enter transports and launch toward Earth. Then he finds the helm.

The control center only contains six Formics. They work separately, but in concert. Vico figures that they are telepathic. He turns back to the shuttle and discusses his findings with Imala.

They had lost communications before the drones arrive, so Imala stores the information in the cloud. She also arranges a failsafe to pass data to the media if they do not contact their site every twenty-four hours. Then they return to Luna.

Meanwhile, Mazer is being held by the General Sima for nuking the Formic lander. Bing talks the MOP troopers into giving the credit to the Chinese general. They release a news statement about MOP only acting as Sima's agents.

Sima releases Mazer from custody and appoints Shenzu as Liaison with the MOPs. Then Sima uses the MOPs to rescue a dozer driver stranded by the Formics. Mazer flies a HERC against a Formic transport while Wit pumps grenades into the alien craft.

This tale takes the MOPs, Shenzu and Bing to a Chinese refuge in the mountains. Bing is placed with the civilians and the MOPs are sent to a restricted military facility. The Chinese start consulting with the MOP detachment on the continuing attacks.

This story concludes the initial conflict with the Formics. Yet another assault against Earth is coming. The next installment in this sequence has not yet been announced on Amazon.

Recommended for Card fans and for anyone else who enjoys tales of space invasions, alien cultures, and a bit of romance. Read and enjoy!

-Arthur W. Jordin
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A Bit Ambitious

Was already hungry for this 3rd book after gobbling the first two. I have to say though that I needed more development of the characters, the individual family stories, and the battle alternatives. Still despise and mistrust the corporate mining king and his son.
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