War Crises on Earth
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truce negotiated for war crises on Earth, and the later lives of the major characters. Contrastily, Cards ending to Enders Game has a final obscure closure of Ender looking for a world a long time that the Buggers cocoon could bloom; Card did not tell how long and what happens nor when did Ender find a world for the Buggers cocoon. This ultimate closure has ambiguity and uncertainty but appropriately concludes the story.
Through the resolution of the major conflict in Enders Game which results in the Buggers war, Orson Scott Card creates a sense of satisfying plot. “And it carried with it the Little Doctor, not so little anymore, the field taking apart every ship in its path, erupting each one into a dot of light before it went on” (Card, 295). Here, the citation suggests that the Buggers planet continues exploding and simultaneously it destroys enemy. This destruction means the end of the war between the Buggers and humans, but from the audiences view after reading these few sentences here only conveys to the audience that Ender had won a game from the simulator not in reality. Shortly after this successful game, the story reveals to the audience that the game actually contains one-hundred percent true war through this citation: “This was the Third Invasion. There were no games, the battles were real, and the only enemy you fought was the Buggers. You did it. You. Real. Not a game” (Card, 297). This passage clearly reveals to the readers that all the games played remains as reality warfare commanded by Ender Wiggin and that the war terminates. This phase of the story pleasingly satisfies and well concludes the work.
From the tension and battle on Earth, Orson Scott Card finds a simple way to both satisfy the will of the reader and fulfill the smoothness of the plot by giving the present of a negotiation and truce establishment on Earth. “Theyre going to start a war. Americans claiming the Warsaw pact is about to attack, and the Russians are saying the same thing about Hegemon.” (Card, 299). This quote proposes that a