Xenocide

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1991 novel by Orson Scott Card
Xenocide
Cover of first edition (hardcover)
AuthorOrson Scott Card
Cover artistJohn Harris[1]
LanguageEnglish
SeriesEnder's Game series
GenreScience fiction
Published1991 (Legend), 1992 (Tor Books)
Publication placeUnited States
Media typePrint (Hardcover, Paperback & ebook)
Pages592
Dewey Decimal
813/.54 20
LC ClassPS3553.A655 X46 1991
Preceded bySpeaker for the Dead 
Followed byChildren of the Mind 

Xenocide (1991) is a science fiction novel by American writer Orson Scott Card, the third book in the Ender's Game series.[2] It was nominated for both the Hugo and Locus Awards for Best Novel in 1992.[3]

Background

As has been common in science fiction writing since the Golden Age of Science Fiction, Card incorporated parts of an earlier published story in a pulp science fiction magazine, Analog Science Fiction and Fact, in the novel Xenocide, specifically the story "Gloriously Bright" from that periodical's January 1991 issue, parts of which appear (according to Card) in Chapters 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, and 11 of the novel.[4][page needed]

Its theme is summed up in the title, a term only applicable in fictional contexts, the "killing or attempted killing of an entire alien species" or "of a single alien".[5] In Card's hands, "xenocide" has both noun and verb connotations deriving from two English combining forms; 'xeno-' comes from the Greek for stranger, foreigner, or host ,[6][7] and '-cide', refers to a killer, from the French -cide, that from Latin -cida, meaning "cutter, killer, slayer".[8][9] While Xenophobia means fear of foreigners; xenocide, as Mr. Card defines it, refers to the extinction of any intelligent nonhuman species.[2]

Plot summary