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I had gone chronologically in the Ender storyline, but now I've reverted back to the Shadow storyline, though I included Ender's Shadow in my first storyline to get a more complete picture of Ender himself and so I could remember details of Ender's Game as freshly as possible while reading its parallel. As those who read my reviews know, I was not pleased with the portrayal of Julian Delphiki aka Bean.
Now, having completed Shadow of the Hegemon, I must say that this book left a far better taste in my mouth. Bean is older, and yet he is more human and less calculating. His character is far more believable and realistic, his flaws more apparent, his personality more relatable. He is more subject to passion and personal goals than pure cold reasoning. As a four to six year old, he was a computer, something I found horribly obnoxious. Now as an older child, he is actually a human. I find this not to be a character development, but an improvement by the author himself. I wish he'd retcon his first book in this series a bit for this reason.
This story details the life of Bean after the war with the Buggers. Though Ender set off in a relativistic journey, Bean returned home to earth, no longer united behind a common enemy of alien invaders, but instead filled with ambitious nations wishing to unite earth under a single government. Bean, the brightest of the Battle School bunch, cannot fight this war alone, so he enlists the aid of Ender's older brother, who is filled with nothing less than arrogance, ambition, and a great deal of sadism. But in this book, we see that in spite of his character flaws, he too is a redeemable and likeable person in his own way. Interestingly, while Bean was extremely ambitious in his post Bugger War plans in the first book, he is explicitly described as not ambitious in this book, again, motivated by people he cares about rather than dominating the world and winning wars.
I like how this story played out. The politics and war of the future are plausible and interesting.
SPOILERS:
Bean loses the woman who pulled him out of the ghetto thanks to his nemesis of childhood who has attained great political power of his own. Bean also learns of his genetic alterations that make him superintelligent as well as small in size, but ultimately results in perpetual growth. Bean rescues the only female mentioned in Battle School, Petra, who is clearly set up for a relationship in the future, should he be willing to join with any woman; he fears passing along his abnormal genes.
END SPOILERS:
I enjoyed this book far more than I remembered. Possibly it has to do with my increased familiarity with geography and geopolitics than the last two times. But I also liked the portrayal of our primary protagonist as well as his somewhat unscrupulous ally. The antagonist is the only character I have a bit of a hard time believing in, considering the amount of power adults are willing to hand over to a child. Nevertheless, this was a good book.