Describe Containing Books Songmaster

Title:Songmaster
Author:Orson Scott Card
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:Special Edition
Pages:Pages: 352 pages
Published:December 6th 2002 by Orb Books (first published July 1980)
Categories:Fantasy. Science Fiction. Fiction. Science Fiction Fantasy. Adult. Music. Speculative Fiction
Download Books For Songmaster  Free
Songmaster Paperback | Pages: 352 pages
Rating: 3.74 | 7023 Users | 336 Reviews

Relation During Books Songmaster

An SF classic from the author of Ender's Game.

Kidnapped at an early age, the young singer Ansset has been raised in isolation at the mystical retreat called the Songhouse. His life has been filled with music, and having only songs for companions, he develops a voice that is unlike any heard before. Ansset's voice is both a blessing and a curse, for the young Songbird can reflect all the hopes and fears his auidence feels and, by magnifying their emotions, use his voice to heal--or to destroy. When it is discovered that his is the voice that the Emperor has waited decades for, Ansset is summoned to the Imperial Palace on Old Earth. Many fates rest in Ansset's hands, and his songs will soon be put to the test: either to salve the troubled conscience of a conqueror, or drive him, and the universe, into mad chaos.

Songmaster is a haunting story of power and love--the tale of the man who would destroy everything he loves to preserve humanity's peace, and the boy who might just sing the world away.

Declare Books As Songmaster

Original Title: Songmaster
ISBN: 0312876629 (ISBN13: 9780312876623)
Edition Language: English
Literary Awards: Locus Award Nominee for Best SF Novel (1981), Hamilton-Brackett Memorial Award (1981)

Rating Containing Books Songmaster
Ratings: 3.74 From 7023 Users | 336 Reviews

Assessment Containing Books Songmaster
This book was really nothing like what I expected. Its actually a great deal like Ender's Game. A young boy grows up as a prodigy, a genius, and the best of the best among a group of exceptionally talented children. He has a great talent for reading and understanding people, and even loving his enemies. After he has accomplished what is expected of him, he is sent away, and perhaps there is a little bit of Bean mixed in, because he goes on to rule Earth. What surprised me the most about this

When I was a teenager, I read a collection of Orson Scott Card's short fiction, and the story that most intrigued me was Mikal's Songbird. Though many of his short works definitely have sinister elements, there was an undercurrent of discomfort in that story that kept Songmaster on my mental reading list for about ten years. And reading it now, there certainly remains something deeply sinister about it. From the very beginning, Card's child protagonist is uncomfortably sexualized, not only by

It's been a while since I've read anything by him and I'd definitely forgotten how beautiful how world building is. His prose is so lovely and he'll contrast it by writing in an event or something so horrible or ugly that it sometimes takes another read or two of the passage to comprehend what exactly happened. Songmaster follows one man from events that make his existence significant to his death. The young man transforms from a gifted young singer in an isolated school to the companion of an

I got 85% into it and had to give up. What a waste of time.Ansset is a completely unrelateable character. Not only does he never stay one age for more than a few chapters, but he is estranged from friends, even more than Ender. He is an alien.The culture was too free with sex, too, which is disturbing in the least. And the way they treat children at the songhouse is disturbing. There was little loyalty among friends or lovers, even with "good" characters.I disliked Mikal, and Riktors, and

This is perhaps my favorite Orson Scott Card book. It has a richly developed universe and characters and covers the entire lifetime of the main character. I did not want to put it down and when the book was over, I felt as if I had been in the presence of a great person and was happy to have joined him on his journey. This book is a science fiction, but has a similar feel to a lot of epic fantasy, so would probably be good for fans of either genre.

For Card, this book was very lyrically written, which I loved. As always, he takes the very long view of humanity in time. However, the story is so intimate, you almost don't realize the broad scope he's writing in until halfway through. It took me a little time to really get into this book, but once I did, I couldn't put it down. The world and characters he created were rich and fascinating - definitely one of my favorites of his to date.

When I was a teenager, I read a collection of Orson Scott Card's short fiction, and the story that most intrigued me was Mikal's Songbird. Though many of his short works definitely have sinister elements, there was an undercurrent of discomfort in that story that kept Songmaster on my mental reading list for about ten years. And reading it now, there certainly remains something deeply sinister about it. From the very beginning, Card's child protagonist is uncomfortably sexualized, not only by