You probably know Orson Scott Card from reading Ender's Game (1986) and the appended Ender's Saga. I know him as being of the most bizarre authors I've ever read because the books early in his career are AMAZING while in the last twenty years I'd classify it all collectively as a mix of senility and epic retardation worthy of Rikers.

There's an eight-year window (1979 through 1987) where Card could write BRILLIANTLY. I mean, no shit, they're some of the best fiction I've ever read. Songmaster was so amazing I had to STOP READING and walk off the adrenaline, and it's also one of the first novels he ever published. Then we get up to Ender's Game in 1986. After that?

Card has the honor of being my favorite and most hated author all at once. His books aren't just fiction, they've got BACKBONE. You'll know what I mean if you've read Ender's Game; Card writes stories that mean something in today's world. Even kids who pick up Ender's Game realize there's something different about it. They're stories that exercise your mind.
But recently, Card's become a bit of an extremist. Empire (2006) is a horrible depiction of how the United States could become a military dictatorship when a rogue general takes over New York City with technology that reeks of Star Wars, leading to a civil war situation between democrats and republicans. WHAT. THE. HELL.

^ I'm aiming for the first panel there. If Card's earlier books are so great, why don't we hear about them? It's because he did tons of stuff that's extremely taboo in young adult fiction, especially for when they were written. Main characters who are homosexual or bisexual, Good guys who aren't good and bad guys who are morally justified? That's too confusing!
Before Ender's Game, Card was thinking a hell of a lot like Rat, and it made for AMAZING stories. When I read Songmaster it blew me THE FUCK away. But then Ender's Game happened, and Card realized that sympathetic innocent main characters who aren't responsible for the actions of big bad governments sells easier. The customer is right, right?

So anyway, Card's writing ability is in the crapper as another casualty of applied commercialism. But his early books are seriously worth reading. Ender's Game not only suffered by having a sympathetic main character, but also a relatively simple plot and morally straightforward characters. If you want to see what he could tackle early on, check out any of these books below:
- Songmaster (1979): One of Card's first published novels, and critically considered the best he's ever written. Songbirds are children trained at a prestigious school on a solitary planet. They are able to reflect and amplify their listeners' thoughts and emotions through song, and no one who hears a Songbird sing is unchanged by the experience. Songmaster is literally the single most impacting novel I've ever read, and I guarantee it'll blow your mind every few pages. Like Ender's Game, it's based on an earlier short story called Mikal's Songbird.
- Hart's Hope (1983): This is probably Card's most controversial novel. It's pure fantasy, and it's thesis is rather similar to the short story The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas, if you've ever had to read that one for English class. It's probably also Card's most morally convoluted story, involving prepubescent rape, adultery, ritual sacrifice and murder. Although not quite as thought provoking as Wyrms, the characterization is exceptional and it's a fascinating read. It also best reflects Card's background as a conservative Mormon.
- Wyrms (1987): Wyrms is a mix of fantasy and science fiction, and is also Card's most theological/philosophical novel. Intergalactic settlers are stranded on a distant planet with practically no metal or advanced technology, effectively knocking them back to the middle ages. Card gets into some pretty heavy philosophy, especially about the metaphysical concept of the tripartite soul (desire, reason, and the human spirit). You can begin to see Card's storytelling degrading, but it's still very far from being crippled.

There are others, of course. Treason (1978) is one that I haven't had time to read as yet - the concept doesn't sound particularly appealing to me, but I'll check it out eventually and probably regret not reading it ages ago. Card has written MASSIVE amounts of short stories summed up in several anthologies. Songmaster and Ender's Game are just two major novels based of earlier short stories. So! That's my sales pitch. GO READ THEM NOW.