The hive

Orson Scott Card

Book - 2019

A second prequel to Ender's Game continues the sci-fi history of the Formic Wars and finds the warring nations and corporations of Earth struggling to set aside their differences to defend against an imminent alien invasion.

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Subjects
Genres
Science fiction
Published
New York : Tor 2019.
Language
English
Main Author
Orson Scott Card (author)
Other Authors
Aaron Johnston (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
396 pages ; 25 cm
ISBN
9780765375643
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Earth is getting clobbered by giant ants from space in this second part of the second prequel trilogy to the child-warrior Ender's Game series (The Swarm, 2016, etc.).There's a self-inflicted element, however, in the damage caused by the Formic invaders. The International Fleet's officer corps is riddled with useless careerists, lackeys, cronies, and favored offspring. The IF high command refuses to share vital intelligence and grows ever more paranoid and ineffectual. It fails to grasp the Formics' Hive Queen's vast intelligence and tactical brilliance, instead sending an official denial that she even exists. Terrorist pirates operate freely in the solar system's outer reaches. And politically there's a bid to oust the relentless and capable Ukko Jukes as Hegemon. It's not all gloom and doom, though. Clever, ruthless, well-connected Col. Li details Special Forces' Mazer Rackham, along with Chinese child-warrior Bingwen and his Rat Army, with identifying the incompetent officers, which Li will then find subtle ways to eliminate. The Rat Army also notices certain asteroids that move mysteriously or vanish and deduces that the Hive Queen has some deep unknown purposeincluding, it seems, taking human captives. Almost without exception, the characters are familiar from the previous installments and engaged in similar hair-raising tasks. Since we know from chronologically later installments of the grand architecture that Earth will, somehow, win, the main source of tension lies in exactly how the authors are going to pull these particular chestnuts from the fire. And a case can be made for the story as commentary on the current climate of militaristic nationalism.Churns agreeably, if with minimal forward momentum. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.