Ender first enters Salamander Army, and then gets traded to rat army, and then Graff sends him to an army that ender commands Dragon Army. In Dragon Army Ender meets a kid named Bean.
Petra Arkanian is considered the wrong kind of friend to have in "Ender's Game" because she cares too much for Ender and challenges his isolation and detachment, which goes against the military's goal to isolate him and mold him into a ruthless commander. Her friendship distracts Ender from his training and causes him to question his identity and purpose in the program. Ultimately, Petra's influence threatens Ender's ability to fulfill his role in the military's plan.
There is no single novel that goes by the title you have mentioned.
Georgiana Enders goes by Georgie.
Spoiler alert! Yes, Ender does technically "die" in the Ender's Game books, but not in the traditional sense. He actually just goes into a self-imposed exile with the last living Formic Queen to try and atone for his past actions. So, he's not dead-dead, just off living his best life in space.
It's because Ender masters the game. He was the best commander they ever had and because of him it is eventually destroyed. Also while he is battling the buggers he believes he is playing a simulation game. The whole thing, to him, is merely a game and not until the end does he understand that he was killing actual creatures.
In "Ender's Game," the resolution involves Ender finding out that the battles he thought were simulations were real, and the alien race was actually defeated by using a devastating weapon. Ender then goes into self-imposed exile and tries to make amends for his actions, ultimately finding a new home for the alien species.
There is no novel that goes by such a name.
There are three versions of the order of the series. The first one, by timeline:Ender's GameEnder's ShadowA War of GiftsShadow of the HegemonShadow PuppetsShadow of the GiantEnder in ExileSpeaker for the DeadXenocideChildren of the MindThe second one, by release date (our library uses this one):Ender's GameSpeaker for the DeadXenocideChildren of the MindEnder's ShadowShadow of the HegemonShadow PuppetsShadow of the GiantA War of GiftsEnder in ExileThe third one, as it appears on the list of "other books by Orson Scott Card" (I prefer to use this one):Ender's GameEnder's ShadowShadow of the HegemonShadow PuppetsShadow of the GiantSpeaker for the DeadXenocideChildren of the MindA War of GiftsEnder in ExileThere are probably going to be more books, like the one being planned right now called Shadows in Flight, and there is also a book called The Authorized Ender Companion, but it is by a different author and is basically just side things, like an encyclopaedia of Ender subjects and movie news as of its publication date. Don't blame me if this answer goes out of date by the time you read it, because I'm not clairvoyant, I like to Google things about Ender. You should try it some time.
First it is set on Earth, then Ender goes out to to Battle School in the Belt. After that he goes back to Earth, then back to battle school, then on to Command School on Eros. Later, he leaves for the bugger planet. Hope this helps!
In a game of Euchre, the player sitting to the left of the dealer goes first.
In the game of mancala, the player sitting to the right of the board goes first.
Several things are going on in that chapter. One of them is that Ender is playing the computer game, and it has shown him a picture of his brother, which is a big mental roadblock for him. Graff knows this, and he is mad. He wants to find out how it happened, but the programmer guy says that the game is doing it on its own, and that somehow Ender needed to face that. So, Graff goes to Earth to talk to Valentine and convince her to write a letter to Ender. She knows it won't fool him, but she gives him the message that Graff wanted to send, because she agrees that it could help. She realizes also in this chapter that she and Peter are a lot alike... not in pure evilness, but in the ability to manipulate and convince others, and she goes along with Peter because she thinks she can temper him, and because he is working for things that she wants too. Anyway, Ender reads the letter and knows he is being manipulated, which hurts him, but it also kind of helps him because he is angry enough to go farther in the game, and he realizes that the perfect image he has in his mind of Valentine maybe isn't absolutely accurate--or at least that it shouldn't stay static. He is able to see her in the game instead of Peter next time he goes into it, and together they move on, so he feels like she will be with him going forward, and it isn't just a memory that he has to freeze in time. It is a win for Ender, but also a win for Graff, because Ender is engaging and moving forward again... motivated to do battle.