Books by Philip K. Dick
Born: 12/06/1928; Died: 03/02/1982Philip K. Dick Biography & Notes
Philip Kindred Dick (December 16, 1928 � March 2, 1982), often known by his initials PKD, or by the pen name Richard Phillips, was an American science fiction writer and novelist who changed the genre profoundly. Though hailed during his lifetime by peers such as Stanislaw Lem, Dick received little public recognition until after his death, when several popular film adaptations of his novels introduced him to a larger audience. His work is now some of the most popular in science fiction, and Dick has gained both general acclaim and critical respect.
Discarding the optimistic and simple world-view of Golden Age science fiction, Dick consistently explored the themes of the nature of reality and humanity in his novels, which were populated by common working people, rather than galactic elites. Foreshadowing the cyberpunk sub-genre, Dick brought the anomic world of Northern California to many of his works. His acclaimed novel, The Man in the High Castle (1963, winner of the Hugo Award), is a pioneering work bridging the genres of alternate history and science fiction. He also produced a tremendous number of short stories and minor works which were published in pulp magazines.
His works are characterized by a constantly eroding sense of reality, with protagonists often discovering that those close to them (or even they themselves) are secretly robots, aliens, supernatural beings, brainwashed spies, hallucinating, or some combination of the above.
Dick experimented with mind-altering drugs, though he often denied that they were influences on his work.
Philip K. Dick was born in Chicago, to Dorothy Kindred Dick. His father, Edgar Dick, was a fraud investigator for the United States Department of Agriculture. He had a twin sister, Jane. Both children were born six weeks premature, and the girl died on January 26, 1929. Shortly thereafter, the family moved to California.
Dick's parents divorced when he was young; he grew up with his mother. He went to high school in Berkeley and briefly attended the University of California, Berkeley, where he majored in German. He sold records and was a disk jockey before selling his first story in 1952. He wrote full-time, more or less, from that time forward. He sold his first novel in 1955. The 1950's were a hard-scrabble time for Dick, so much so that, as he once said, "we couldn't even pay the late fees on a library book." He associated with the pre-1960's counterculture of California and was sympathetic to beat poets and the Communist Party. In 1963, he won the Hugo Award for The Man in the High Castle. Though Dick was hailed as a genius at this time in the SF world, the literary world as a whole was as yet unappreciative, and so he could only publish books at low-paying SF publishers. Consequently, while he would regularly publish novels for the next several years, he continued to struggle financially and psychologically. Dick was opposed to the Vietnam War and had a file at the FBI as a result.
In his youth, around the age of thirteen, Dick had a recurring dream for a number of weeks. He dreamt that he was in a bookstore, trying to find an issue of Astounding. This issue, when he found it, would contain a story called "The Empire Never Ended", which would reveal to him the secrets of the universe. As the dream repeated, the pile of magazines through which he was searching got smaller and smaller, but he never reached the bottom of it. Eventually, he became anxious that discovering the magazine would drive him mad (like the Lovecraftian Necronomicon, promising insanity to its readers). Shortly thereafter, the dreams stopped. They never returned, but the phrase "The Empire Never Ended" would appear in his later works.
On February 20, 1974 he was recovering from the effects of sodium pentothal administered after the extraction of an impacted wisdom tooth. Answering the door to receive a delivery of additional painkillers, he noticed the woman delivering the package was wearing a pendant with what he called the "vesicle pisces". (He probably was referring to the intersecting arcs of the vesica piscis.) After her departure, Dick began experiencing strange visions. Although this may have initially been attributed to the painkillers, after weeks of these visions, such a rationale becomes less probable. Throughout February and March of 1974 he received a series of visions which he collectively referred to as 2-3-74, shorthand for February/March of 1974. He described his initial visions as laser beams and geometric patterns, and occasionally brief pictures of Jesus Christ and ancient Rome, which he would glimpse periodically. As the pictures increased in length and frequency, Dick claimed that he began to live a double life, one as himself and one as Thomas, a Christian persecuted by Romans in the 1st century C.E. Despite his current and past drug use, Dick accepted these visions as reality, believing that he had been contacted by a god-entity of some kind, which he referred to as Zebra, God, and most often VALIS. VALIS is an acronym for Vast Active Living Intelligence System; he used this term as the title of one of his novels, and later theorized that it was a satellite of some kind which used beams to communicate with people on Earth. He claimed that the being used what he called "disinhibiting stimuli" to prep the subjects for the communication, in his case the vesicle pisces.
Most observers of this phenomenon would conclude that Dick's visions were a brief psychotic episode, and they might be correct in that assumption. What has allowed the mystery of Dick's experiences to endure are anecdotal reports of several intriguing incidences such as the following:
At one point, during an encounter with the VALIS, Dick learned that his infant son was in danger of perishing from an unnamed malady. Routine checkups on the child had shown no trouble or illness; however, Dick insisted that thorough tests be run to ensure his son's health. The doctor eventually complied, despite the fact that there were no apparent symptoms. During the examination doctors discovered an inguinal hernia, which would have killed the child if an operation was not quickly performed. The child survived thanks to the operation, which Dick accredited to the VALIS.
Another event was an episode of glossolalia. Dick's wife transcribed the sounds she heard him speak, and Dick wrote that they later discovered that he was speaking an ancient dialect of the Greek language, which he had never studied.
Regardless of the apparent evidence that he was somehow experiencing a divine communication, Dick was unable ever to fully rationalize the events. For the rest of his life, he struggled to fully comprehend what was occurring, questioning his own sanity and perception of reality. He excised what thoughts he could into an 8,000 page, million word journal dubbed the Exegesis. He spent sleepless nights furiously writing into this journal, in some instances high on large quantities of amphetamines, which no doubt contributed to its eclectic tone. A recurring theme in the Exegesis is Dick's hypothesis that history had been stopped in the 1st century, and that the "[Roman] Empire never ended". He saw Rome as the pinnacle of materialism, and that after forcing the Gnostics underground 1900 years earlier had kept the population of the Earth as thralls to worldly possessions. Dick believed that VALIS had contacted him and unnamed others to induce the "impeachment" (read: assassination) of Richard M. Nixon, whom Dick believed to be the current Emperor incarnate.
As time went on, he became increasingly paranoid, imagining plots against him perpetrated by the KGB or FBI, who he believed were constantly laying traps for him. At one point he alleged that they had broken into his house and pilfered various documents, though later he stated that he probably committed the burglary himself, and then forgotten he had done so.
His later works, especially the Valis trilogy, were heavily autobiographical, many with 2-3-74 references or influences. Dick was also a voracious reader of works on religion, philosophy, metaphysics, and Gnosticism, and these ideas found their way into many of his stories. His final novel was The Transmigration of Timothy Archer. Dick's works may be compared with those of William S. Burroughs, though Dick is arguably less scathing and more philosophical.
Dick married five times, and had two daughters and a son. The first four ended in divorce; the last in his death.
* May 1948, to Jeanette Marlin (lasted six months)
* June 1950, to Kleo Apostolides (divorced 1958)
* 1958, to Anne Williams Rubinstein (children: Laura Archer, born February 26, 1960) (divorced 1964)
* 1966 or 1967 (sources conflict), to Nancy Hackett (children: Isolde, usually called "Isa") (divorced 1970)
* April 18, 1973, to Tessa Busby (children: Christopher)
Philip K. Dick died of a stroke in 1982 without having learned what had caused his strange visions. It has been theorized that Dick suffered from epileptic discharges in his temporal lobe. This can cause subtle, non-disabling seizures which can cause feelings ranging from a general disorientation to visions often construed by the victim as "psychic" experiences or epiphanies. This particular region of the brain allows for differentiation of reality and fantasy and is very sensitive to epileptic discharges. The symptoms which go along with these discharges read like a summary of the last decade of Dick's life. Part and parcel to these kind of seizures is a behavioral phenomenon called "hypergraphia", where the subject begins obsessively documenting their experiences, usually in journal form.
After his death (he was disconnected from life support on March 2, but his EEG had been flat for five days prior to that), his father Edgar, who was still alive at that point, brought his son's body to Fort Morgan, Colorado. When his twin Jane had died, a tombstone had been carved with both of their names on it, and an empty space for Philip's date of death. After fifty-three years, that final date was carved in, and Philip K. Dick was buried beside his sister.
Like other more famous science fiction authors, several of Dick's stories have been made into movies. Most of these are only loosely based on Dick's original story, using them as a starting-point for a Hollywood action-adventure story. While the most admired is Ridley Scott's classic movie Blade Runner, the action film Total Recall faithfully translates a number of Dick themes, albeit with uncharacteristic violence.
Philip K. Dick is often cited as a major influence on the Cyberpunk movement led by William Gibson, but as this work, and titles as diverse as the inventive Eye in the Sky and Martian Time Slip, the moving Galactic Pot-Healer, the complex and yet delicate The Man in the High Castle and the chilling yet deeply moving A Scanner Darkly show, there was much more to his genius than just influence.
One influence which may considered unusually distant from science fiction within "culture space" is the composition by Tod Machover, and performance, of an opera VALIS.
Discarding the optimistic and simple world-view of Golden Age science fiction, Dick consistently explored the themes of the nature of reality and humanity in his novels, which were populated by common working people, rather than galactic elites. Foreshadowing the cyberpunk sub-genre, Dick brought the anomic world of Northern California to many of his works. His acclaimed novel, The Man in the High Castle (1963, winner of the Hugo Award), is a pioneering work bridging the genres of alternate history and science fiction. He also produced a tremendous number of short stories and minor works which were published in pulp magazines.
His works are characterized by a constantly eroding sense of reality, with protagonists often discovering that those close to them (or even they themselves) are secretly robots, aliens, supernatural beings, brainwashed spies, hallucinating, or some combination of the above.
Dick experimented with mind-altering drugs, though he often denied that they were influences on his work.
Philip K. Dick was born in Chicago, to Dorothy Kindred Dick. His father, Edgar Dick, was a fraud investigator for the United States Department of Agriculture. He had a twin sister, Jane. Both children were born six weeks premature, and the girl died on January 26, 1929. Shortly thereafter, the family moved to California.
Dick's parents divorced when he was young; he grew up with his mother. He went to high school in Berkeley and briefly attended the University of California, Berkeley, where he majored in German. He sold records and was a disk jockey before selling his first story in 1952. He wrote full-time, more or less, from that time forward. He sold his first novel in 1955. The 1950's were a hard-scrabble time for Dick, so much so that, as he once said, "we couldn't even pay the late fees on a library book." He associated with the pre-1960's counterculture of California and was sympathetic to beat poets and the Communist Party. In 1963, he won the Hugo Award for The Man in the High Castle. Though Dick was hailed as a genius at this time in the SF world, the literary world as a whole was as yet unappreciative, and so he could only publish books at low-paying SF publishers. Consequently, while he would regularly publish novels for the next several years, he continued to struggle financially and psychologically. Dick was opposed to the Vietnam War and had a file at the FBI as a result.
In his youth, around the age of thirteen, Dick had a recurring dream for a number of weeks. He dreamt that he was in a bookstore, trying to find an issue of Astounding. This issue, when he found it, would contain a story called "The Empire Never Ended", which would reveal to him the secrets of the universe. As the dream repeated, the pile of magazines through which he was searching got smaller and smaller, but he never reached the bottom of it. Eventually, he became anxious that discovering the magazine would drive him mad (like the Lovecraftian Necronomicon, promising insanity to its readers). Shortly thereafter, the dreams stopped. They never returned, but the phrase "The Empire Never Ended" would appear in his later works.
On February 20, 1974 he was recovering from the effects of sodium pentothal administered after the extraction of an impacted wisdom tooth. Answering the door to receive a delivery of additional painkillers, he noticed the woman delivering the package was wearing a pendant with what he called the "vesicle pisces". (He probably was referring to the intersecting arcs of the vesica piscis.) After her departure, Dick began experiencing strange visions. Although this may have initially been attributed to the painkillers, after weeks of these visions, such a rationale becomes less probable. Throughout February and March of 1974 he received a series of visions which he collectively referred to as 2-3-74, shorthand for February/March of 1974. He described his initial visions as laser beams and geometric patterns, and occasionally brief pictures of Jesus Christ and ancient Rome, which he would glimpse periodically. As the pictures increased in length and frequency, Dick claimed that he began to live a double life, one as himself and one as Thomas, a Christian persecuted by Romans in the 1st century C.E. Despite his current and past drug use, Dick accepted these visions as reality, believing that he had been contacted by a god-entity of some kind, which he referred to as Zebra, God, and most often VALIS. VALIS is an acronym for Vast Active Living Intelligence System; he used this term as the title of one of his novels, and later theorized that it was a satellite of some kind which used beams to communicate with people on Earth. He claimed that the being used what he called "disinhibiting stimuli" to prep the subjects for the communication, in his case the vesicle pisces.
Most observers of this phenomenon would conclude that Dick's visions were a brief psychotic episode, and they might be correct in that assumption. What has allowed the mystery of Dick's experiences to endure are anecdotal reports of several intriguing incidences such as the following:
At one point, during an encounter with the VALIS, Dick learned that his infant son was in danger of perishing from an unnamed malady. Routine checkups on the child had shown no trouble or illness; however, Dick insisted that thorough tests be run to ensure his son's health. The doctor eventually complied, despite the fact that there were no apparent symptoms. During the examination doctors discovered an inguinal hernia, which would have killed the child if an operation was not quickly performed. The child survived thanks to the operation, which Dick accredited to the VALIS.
Another event was an episode of glossolalia. Dick's wife transcribed the sounds she heard him speak, and Dick wrote that they later discovered that he was speaking an ancient dialect of the Greek language, which he had never studied.
Regardless of the apparent evidence that he was somehow experiencing a divine communication, Dick was unable ever to fully rationalize the events. For the rest of his life, he struggled to fully comprehend what was occurring, questioning his own sanity and perception of reality. He excised what thoughts he could into an 8,000 page, million word journal dubbed the Exegesis. He spent sleepless nights furiously writing into this journal, in some instances high on large quantities of amphetamines, which no doubt contributed to its eclectic tone. A recurring theme in the Exegesis is Dick's hypothesis that history had been stopped in the 1st century, and that the "[Roman] Empire never ended". He saw Rome as the pinnacle of materialism, and that after forcing the Gnostics underground 1900 years earlier had kept the population of the Earth as thralls to worldly possessions. Dick believed that VALIS had contacted him and unnamed others to induce the "impeachment" (read: assassination) of Richard M. Nixon, whom Dick believed to be the current Emperor incarnate.
As time went on, he became increasingly paranoid, imagining plots against him perpetrated by the KGB or FBI, who he believed were constantly laying traps for him. At one point he alleged that they had broken into his house and pilfered various documents, though later he stated that he probably committed the burglary himself, and then forgotten he had done so.
His later works, especially the Valis trilogy, were heavily autobiographical, many with 2-3-74 references or influences. Dick was also a voracious reader of works on religion, philosophy, metaphysics, and Gnosticism, and these ideas found their way into many of his stories. His final novel was The Transmigration of Timothy Archer. Dick's works may be compared with those of William S. Burroughs, though Dick is arguably less scathing and more philosophical.
Dick married five times, and had two daughters and a son. The first four ended in divorce; the last in his death.
* May 1948, to Jeanette Marlin (lasted six months)
* June 1950, to Kleo Apostolides (divorced 1958)
* 1958, to Anne Williams Rubinstein (children: Laura Archer, born February 26, 1960) (divorced 1964)
* 1966 or 1967 (sources conflict), to Nancy Hackett (children: Isolde, usually called "Isa") (divorced 1970)
* April 18, 1973, to Tessa Busby (children: Christopher)
Philip K. Dick died of a stroke in 1982 without having learned what had caused his strange visions. It has been theorized that Dick suffered from epileptic discharges in his temporal lobe. This can cause subtle, non-disabling seizures which can cause feelings ranging from a general disorientation to visions often construed by the victim as "psychic" experiences or epiphanies. This particular region of the brain allows for differentiation of reality and fantasy and is very sensitive to epileptic discharges. The symptoms which go along with these discharges read like a summary of the last decade of Dick's life. Part and parcel to these kind of seizures is a behavioral phenomenon called "hypergraphia", where the subject begins obsessively documenting their experiences, usually in journal form.
After his death (he was disconnected from life support on March 2, but his EEG had been flat for five days prior to that), his father Edgar, who was still alive at that point, brought his son's body to Fort Morgan, Colorado. When his twin Jane had died, a tombstone had been carved with both of their names on it, and an empty space for Philip's date of death. After fifty-three years, that final date was carved in, and Philip K. Dick was buried beside his sister.
Like other more famous science fiction authors, several of Dick's stories have been made into movies. Most of these are only loosely based on Dick's original story, using them as a starting-point for a Hollywood action-adventure story. While the most admired is Ridley Scott's classic movie Blade Runner, the action film Total Recall faithfully translates a number of Dick themes, albeit with uncharacteristic violence.
Philip K. Dick is often cited as a major influence on the Cyberpunk movement led by William Gibson, but as this work, and titles as diverse as the inventive Eye in the Sky and Martian Time Slip, the moving Galactic Pot-Healer, the complex and yet delicate The Man in the High Castle and the chilling yet deeply moving A Scanner Darkly show, there was much more to his genius than just influence.
One influence which may considered unusually distant from science fiction within "culture space" is the composition by Tod Machover, and performance, of an opera VALIS.
Suggestions or corrections for the editor? Click here.
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The Best of Philip K. Dick by Philip K. Dick ( 1977) |
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Blade Runner Suenan los Androides Con Ovejas Electricas? / Blade Runner Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? by Philip K. Dick ( 2007)
Originally published in 1968 as "Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep," this novel is considered by some to be the book that inspired cyberpunk.
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Blade Runner by Philip K. Dick, Les Martin ( 1982)
In the year 2019, lifelike robots clash with their human makers in an effort to alter the destiny for which they have been programmed.
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Clans of the Alphane Moon by Philip K. Dick ( 2002)
When the Alphane moon becomes an insane asylum, its inmates, left alone, form clans based on their respective psychoses, but when Earth psychologist Mary Rittersdorf attempts to rehospitalize these lunatics, they retaliate against her invasion of their privacy. Reprint.
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Confessions of a Crap Artist by Philip K. Dick ( 1992)
Confessions of a Crap Artist is one of Philip K. Dicks strangest and most accomplished novels. Jack Isidore is a crap artist--a collector of crackpot ideas (among other things, he belies that the earth is hollow and that sunlight has weight) and worthless objects, a man so grossly unequipped for real life that his sister and brother-in-law feel compelled to rescue him. But seen through Jacks murderously innocent gaze, Charlie and Judie Hume prove to be just as sealed off from reality, in thrall to obsessions that are slightly more acceptable than Jack's, but a great deal uglier.
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The Cosmic Puppets by Philip K. Dick ( 2003)
Yielding to a compulsion he can’t explain, Ted Barton interrupts his vacation in order to visit the town of his birth, Millgate, Virginia. But upon entering the sleepy, isolated little hamlet, Ted is distraught to find that the place bears no resemblance to the one he left behind—and never did. He also discovers that in this Millgate Ted Barton died of scarlet fever when he was nine years old. Perhaps even more troubling is the fact that it is literally impossible to escape. Unable to leave, Ted struggles to find the reason for such disturbing incongruities, but before long, he finds himself in the midst of a struggle between good and evil that stretches far beyond the confines of the valley.
Winner of both the Hugo and John W. Campbell awards for best novel, widely regarded as the premiere science fiction writer of his day, and the object of cult-like adoration from his legions of fans, Philip K. Dick has come to be seen in a literary light that defies classification in much the same way as Borges and Calvino. With breathtaking insight, he utilizes vividly unfamiliar worlds to evoke the hauntingly and hilariously familiar in our society and ourselves. |
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Counter-Clock World by Philip K. Dick ( 2002)
In Counter-Clock World, one of the most theologically probing of all of Dick’s books, the world has entered the Hobart Phase–a vast sidereal process in which time moves in reverse. As a result, libraries are busy eradicating books, copulation signifies the end of pregnancy, people greet with, “Good-bye,” and part with, “Hello,” and underneath the world’s tombstones, the dead are coming back to life. One imminent old-born is Anarch Peak, a vibrant religious leader whose followers continued to flourish long after his death. His return from the dead has such awesome implications that those who apprehend him will very likely be those who control the fate of the world.
Winner of both the Hugo and John W. Campbell awards for best novel, widely regarded as the premiere science fiction writer of his day, and the object of cult-like adoration from his legions of fans, Philip K. Dick has come to be seen in a literary light that defies classification in much the same way as Borges and Calvino. With breathtaking insight, he utilizes vividly unfamiliar worlds to evoke the hauntingly and hilariously familiar in our society and ourselves. |
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The Crack In Space by Philip K. Dick ( 1991) |
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The Dark Haired Girl by Philip K. Dick ( 1988) |
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Deus Irae by Philip K. Dick, Roger Zelazny ( 2003)
In the years following World War III, a new and powerful faith has arisen from a scorched and poisoned Earth, a faith that embraces the architect of world wide devastation. The Servants of Wrath have deified Carlton Lufteufel and re-christened him the Deus Irae. In the small community of Charlottesville, Utah, Tibor McMasters, born without arms or legs, has, through an array of prostheses, established a far-reaching reputation as an inspired painter. When the new church commissions a grand mural depicting the Deus Irae, it falls upon Tibor to make a treacherous journey to find the man, to find the god, and capture his terrible visage for posterity.
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Die Seltsamen Welten Des Philip K. Dick by Philip K. Dick, Uwe Anton ( 1984) |
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Divine Invasion by Philip K. Dick ( 1991)
n The Divine Invasion, Philip K. Dick asks: What if God--or a being called Yah--were alive and in exile on a distant planet? How could a second coming succeed against the high technology and finely tuned rationalized evil of the modern police state? The Divine Invasion "blends Judaism, Kabalah, Zoroastrianism, and Christianity into a fascinating fable of human existence" (West Coast Revew of Books).
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Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? by Philip K. Dick ( 1996)
THE INSPIRATION FOR BLADERUNNER. . . Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? was published in 1968. Grim and foreboding, even today it is a masterpiece ahead of its time. By 2021, the World War had killed millions, driving entire species into extinction and sending mankind off-planet. Those who remained coveted any living creature, and for people who couldn't afford one, companies built incredibly realistic simulacrae: horses, birds, cats, sheep. . . They even built humans. Emigrees to Mars received androids so sophisticated it was impossible to tell them from true men or women. Fearful of the havoc these artificial humans could wreak, the government banned them from Earth. But when androids didn't want to be identified, they just blended in.
Rick Deckard was an officially sanctioned bounty hunter whose job was to find rogue androids, and to retire them. But cornered, androids tended to fight back, with deadly results. |
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Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? 2 by Philip K. Dick ( 2010) |
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Dr. Bloodmoney by Philip K. Dick ( 2008)
The world's diminishing population searches for salvation and survival after the nuclear holocaust.
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Dr. Futurity by Philip K. Dick ( 2005)
Dr. Jim Parsons is hurled into the future and discovers the enormous consequences of the technocrats' seizure of control and their creation of an American paradise free from poverty and disease.
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The Early Stories of Philip K. Dick The Variable Man and Other Stories by Philip K. Dick ( 2009) |
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The Early Work of Philip K. Dick The Variable Man & Other Stories by Philip K. Dick ( 2009) |
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Eye in the Sky by Philip K. Dick ( 1993)
What begins as a stroll on an overcast day turns into an apocalyptic experience for a group of visitors to a laboratory. When a telescope's particle-light beam slices across their paths, each one of them enters a dreamlike odyssey that exposes their innermost hopes, dreams, and terrifying fears. As emergency workers desperately scramble to rescue the victims from the charred wreckage, their souls begin an incredible journey through one fantastic nightmare world after another. One of the victims, Jack Hamilton, realizes something the others do not: that in each strange new world they are trapped by forces utterly beyond those that govern the real world, forces that may never set them free.
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Eye of the Sibyl And Other Classic Stories by Philip K. Dick ( 1992)
Since his untimely death in 1982, interest in Philip K. Dick's works has continued to grow, and his reputation has been enhanced by an expanding body of critical appreciation. This fifth and final volume of Dick's collected works includes 25 short stories, some previously unpublished.
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Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said by Philip K. Dick, Linda Hartinian ( 1990) |
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Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said Library Edition by Philip K. Dick ( 2007) |
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Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said by Philip K. Dick ( 1993)
In Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said, Philip K. Dick immerses us in a horribly plausible United States in which everyone--from a waiflike forger of identity cards to a surgically altered pleasure queen--informs on everyone else, a world in which even the omniscient police have something to hide. This bleakly beautiful novel bores into the deepest bedrock of the self.
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Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said Library Edition by Philip K. Dick ( 2007) |
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Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said Library Edition by Philip K. Dick ( 2007) |
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Galactic Pot-Healer by Philip K. Dick ( 1994)
What could an omnipresent and seemingly omnipotent entity want with a humble pot-healer? Or with the dozens of other odd creatures it has lured to Plowman's Planet? And if the Glimmung is a god, are its ends positive or malign? Combining quixotic adventure, spine-chilling horror, and deliriously paranoid theology, Galactic Pot-Healer is a uniquely Dickian voyage to alternate worlds of the imagination.
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The Game-Players of Titan by Philip K. Dick ( 1992)
In this sardonically funny gem of speculative fiction, Philip K. Dick creates a novel that manages to be simultaneously unpredictable and perversely logical. Poor Pete Garden has just lost Berkeley. Hes also lost his wife, but hell get a new one as soon as he rolls a three. Its all part of the rules of Bluff, the game thats become a blinding obsession for the last inhabitants of the planet Earth. But the rules are about to change--drastically and terminally--because Pete Garden will be playing his next game against an opponent who isn't even human, for stakes that are a lot higher than Berkeley.
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The Ganymede Takeover by Philip K. Dick, Ray Nelson ( 1990)
With the illusion machine in their power, aliens plan the takeover of earth, because the vampires, man-eating plants, cannibal children, and other things, are illusions no longer.
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Gather Yourselves Together by Philip K. Dick ( 1994) |
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A Handful of Darkness by Philip K. Dick ( 1978) |
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El Hombre En El Castillo by Philip K. Dick ( 2002) |
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Humpty Dumpty in Oakland by Philip K. Dick ( 2008)
In 1950s San Francisco, as Jim Ferguson, an elderly garage owner with a heart condition, prepares to retire and sell his business, he is offered the deal of a lifetime by record-company owner Chris Harman, but Al Miller, a somewhat irresponsible mechanic who works in Jim's Garage, believes that Harman is a crook and sets out to protect his mentor. Reprint. 15,000 first printing.
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I Hope I Shall Arrive Soon by Philip K. Dick ( 1987)
This volume brings together ten previously uncollected stories and a major unpublished essay, which span nearly thirty years of the career of the noted science fiction writer.
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In Milton Lumky Territory by Philip K. Dick ( 2009) |
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LA Mente Alien by Philip K. Dick ( 2001) |
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Lies, Inc. by Philip K. Dick ( 2004)
A masterwork by Philip K. Dick, this is the final, expanded version of the novellla The Unteleported Man, which Dick worked on shortly before his death. In Lies, Inc., fans of the science fiction legend will immediately recognize his hallmark themes of life in a security state, conspiracy, and the blurring of reality and illusion. This publication marks its first complete appearance in the United States.
In this wry, paranoid vision of the future, overpopulation has turned cities into cramed industrial anthills. For those sick of this dystopian reality, one corporation, Trails of Hoffman, Inc., promises an alternative: Take a teleport to Whale's Mouth, a colonized planet billed as the supreme paradise. The only catch is that you can never comeback. When a neurotic man named Rachmael ben Applebaum discovers that the promotional films of happy crowds cheering their newfound existence on Whale's Mouth are faked, he decides to pilot a scapeship on the eighteen-year journey there to see if anyone wants to return. |
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The Man Who Japed by Philip K. Dick ( 2002)
The Man Who Japed is Dick's mesmerizing and terrifying tale of a society so eager for order that it will sacrifice anything, including its freedom. Newer York is a post-holocaust city governed by the laws of an oppressively rigid morality. Highly mobile and miniature robots monitor the behavior of every citizen, and the slightest transgression can spell personal doom. Allen Purcell is one of the few people who has the capacity to literally change the way of the world, and once he's offered a high-profile job that acts as guardian of public ethics, he sets out to do precisely that. But first he must deal with the head in his closet.
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The Man Whose Teeth Were All Exactly Alike by Philip K. Dick ( 2010) |
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The Man in the High Castle by Philip K. Dick ( 2008)
A masterpiece of the science-fiction genre, and the most famous novel by paranoid genius Philip K. Dick, THE MAN IN THE HIGH CASTLE (1962) won a Hugo Award for its imagination of a parallel reality America 20 years after the Allies lost World War II. Dick envisions an America split in half between Japanese and German overlords, with the Nazis ruling the East and the Japanese controlling the West. In this alternate world, San Francisco has become a strange colonial city, where Americans seek to please the Japanese upper class, and learn to live by the philosophy of the I-Ching. Meanwhile, in one of Dick's notorious convolutions, a banned book titled "The Grasshopper Lies Heavy" circulates in the literary underworld, a book that proposes a world where the Axis lost the war.
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The Man in the High Castle by Philip K. Dick ( 1992)
It's America in 1962. Slavery is legal once again. the few Jews who still survive hide under assumed names. In San Francisco the I Ching is as common as the Yellow Pages. All because some 20 years earlier the United States lost a war--and is now occupied jointly by Nazi Germany and Japan. This harrowing, Hugo Award-winning novel is the work that established Philip K. Dick as an innovator in science fiction while breaking the barrier between science fiction and the serious novel of ideas. In it Dick offers a haunting vision of history as a nightmare from which it may just be possible to awake.
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The Man in the High Castle by Philip K. Dick ( 2008)
A masterpiece of the science-fiction genre, and the most famous novel by paranoid genius Philip K. Dick, THE MAN IN THE HIGH CASTLE (1962) won a Hugo Award for its imagination of a parallel reality America 20 years after the Allies lost World War II. Dick envisions an America split in half between Japanese and German overlords, with the Nazis ruling the East and the Japanese controlling the West. In this alternate world, San Francisco has become a strange colonial city, where Americans seek to please the Japanese upper class, and learn to live by the philosophy of the I-Ching. Meanwhile, in one of Dick's notorious convolutions, a banned book titled "The Grasshopper Lies Heavy" circulates in the literary underworld, a book that proposes a world where the Axis lost the war.
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The Man in the High Castle by Philip K. Dick ( 2008)
A masterpiece of the science-fiction genre, and the most famous novel by paranoid genius Philip K. Dick, THE MAN IN THE HIGH CASTLE (1962) won a Hugo Award for its imagination of a parallel reality America 20 years after the Allies lost World War II. Dick envisions an America split in half between Japanese and German overlords, with the Nazis ruling the East and the Japanese controlling the West. In this alternate world, San Francisco has become a strange colonial city, where Americans seek to please the Japanese upper class, and learn to live by the philosophy of the I-Ching. Meanwhile, in one of Dick's notorious convolutions, a banned book titled "The Grasshopper Lies Heavy" circulates in the literary underworld, a book that proposes a world where the Axis lost the war.
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The Man in the High Castle by Philip K. Dick ( 2008)
A masterpiece of the science-fiction genre, and the most famous novel by paranoid genius Philip K. Dick, THE MAN IN THE HIGH CASTLE (1962) won a Hugo Award for its imagination of a parallel reality America 20 years after the Allies lost World War II. Dick envisions an America split in half between Japanese and German overlords, with the Nazis ruling the East and the Japanese controlling the West. In this alternate world, San Francisco has become a strange colonial city, where Americans seek to please the Japanese upper class, and learn to live by the philosophy of the I-Ching. Meanwhile, in one of Dick's notorious convolutions, a banned book titled "The Grasshopper Lies Heavy" circulates in the literary underworld, a book that proposes a world where the Axis lost the war.
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The Man in the High Castle by Philip K. Dick ( 2008)
A masterpiece of the science-fiction genre, and the most famous novel by paranoid genius Philip K. Dick, THE MAN IN THE HIGH CASTLE (1962) won a Hugo Award for its imagination of a parallel reality America 20 years after the Allies lost World War II. Dick envisions an America split in half between Japanese and German overlords, with the Nazis ruling the East and the Japanese controlling the West. In this alternate world, San Francisco has become a strange colonial city, where Americans seek to please the Japanese upper class, and learn to live by the philosophy of the I-Ching. Meanwhile, in one of Dick's notorious convolutions, a banned book titled "The Grasshopper Lies Heavy" circulates in the literary underworld, a book that proposes a world where the Axis lost the war.
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Martian Time-Slip by Philip K. Dick ( 1995)
On the arid colony of Mars the only thing more precious than water may be a ten-year-old schizophrenic boy named Manfred Steiner. For although the UN has slated "anomalous" children for deportation and destruction, other people--especially Supreme Goodmember Arnie Kott of the Water Workers union--suspect that Manfred's disorder may be a window into the future. In Martian Time-Slip Philip K. Dick uses power politics and extraterrestrial real estate scams, adultery, and murder to penetrate the mysteries of being and time.
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Martian Time-Slip and the Golden Man by Philip K. Dick ( 2007) |
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Martian Time-Slip and the Golden Man by Philip K. Dick ( 2007) |
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Martian Time-Slip and the Golden Man Library Edition by Philip K. Dick ( 2007) |
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Martian Time-Slip and the Golden Man by Philip K. Dick ( 2007) |
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Martian Time-Slip and the Golden Man Library Edition by Philip K. Dick ( 2007) |
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Mary and the Giant by Philip K. Dick ( 1989)
Dissatisfied with her life in a small California town, Mary Anne Reynolds decides to make some changes.
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A Maze of Death by Philip K. Dick ( 1994)
Fourteen strangers came to Delmak-O. Thirteen of them were transferred by the usual authorities. One got there by praying. But once they arrived on that planet whose very atmosphere seemed to induce paranoia and psychosis, the newcomers found that even prayer was useless. For on Delmak-O, God is either absent or intent on destroying His creations.
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The Minority Report by Philip K. Dick ( 2002)
Commissioner John Anderton's clever use of the Precrime System, which uses "precogs," people with the ability to see into the future, to identify criminals before they can do any harm, is confronted with a serious glitch when his precogs identify Anderton himself as the next criminal and he must race against time to save himself.
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The Minority Report and Other Classic Stories by Philip K. Dick ( 2002)
Eighteen short stories by the master of science fiction features "The Minority Report," in which Commissioner John Anderton's clever use of "precogs," people who can identify criminals before than can do any harm, turns against him when he is identified as the next criminal. Reprint. (A Dreamworks film, directed by Steven Spielberg, releasing June 2002, starring Tom Cruise, Meryl Streep, & Max Van Sydow) (Science Fiction & Fantasy)
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Nick and the Glimmung by Philip K. Dick ( 2009) |
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Now Wait for Last Year by Philip K. Dick ( 1993)
Now Wait For Last Year bursts through the envelope between the impossible and the inevitable. Even as it ushers us into a future that looks uncannily like the present, it makes the normal seem terrifyingly provisional--and compels anyone who reads it to wonder if he really knows what time it is.
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Our Friends from Frolix 8 by Philip K. Dick ( 2003)
It could be a recipe for disaster when menial laborer Nick Appleton and despot Willis Gram, leader of the elite oligarchy ruling Earth, both fall in love with a black marketer of revolutionary propaganda, but everything changes dramatically when fugitive revolutionary leader Thors Provoni returns from Frolix 8 with the intent of creating anew world order.
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Paycheck And Other Classic Stories by Philip K. Dick ( 2003) |
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The Penultimate Truth by Philip K. Dick ( 2004)
What if you discovered that everything you knew about the world was a lie? That’s the question at the heart of Philip K. Dick’s futuristic novel about political oppression, the show business of politics and the sinister potential of the military industrial complex. This wry, paranoid thriller imagines a future in which the earth has been ravaged, and cities are burnt-out wastelands too dangerous for human life. Americans have been shipped underground, where they toil in crowded industrial ant hills and receive a steady diet of inspiring speeches from a President who never seems to age. Nick St. James, like the rest of the masses, believed in the words of his leaders. But that all changes when he travels to the surface—where what he finds is more shocking than anything he could possibly imagine.
Winner of both the Hugo and John W. Campbell awards for best novel, widely regarded as the premiere science fiction writer of his day, and the object of cult-like adoration from his legions of fans, Philip K. Dick has come to be seen in a literary light that defies classification in much the same way as Borges and Calvino. With breathtaking insight, he utlizes vividly unfamiliar worlds to evoke the hauntingly and hilariously familiar in our society and ourselves. |
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Philip K. Dick Four Novels of the 1960s by Philip K. Dick, Jonathan Lethem ( 2007)
Published to coincide with the twenty-fifth anniversary re-release of the film
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The Philip K. Dick Collection by Philip K. Dick ( 2009)
Collects thirteen definitive works by the eminent science-fiction master, in a chronologically arranged, three-volume boxed set that includes such titles as
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The Philip K. Dick Reader by Philip K. Dick ( 1997)
Gathers twenty-four science fiction stories, including "We Can Remember It for You Wholesale," "Second Variety," "The Golden Man," and "The Last of the Masters"
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Philip K. Dick the Last Testament by Philip K. Dick ( 1985) |
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The Preserving Machine and Other Stories by Philip K. Dick ( 1971) |
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Puttering About in a Small Land by Philip K. Dick ( 2009) |
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Puttering About in a Small Land by Philip K. Dick ( 1992)
When the Lindahls meet the Bonners, their marriage is already in deep trouble. This meeting is a catalyst for a complicated series of emotions and traumas set against the backdrop of suburban Los Angeles in the early `50s.
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Radio Free Albemuth by Philip K. Dick ( 1998)
In Radio Free Albemuth, his last novel, Philip K. Dick morphed and recombined themes that had informed his fiction from A Scanner Darkly to VALIS and produced a wild, impassioned work that reads like a visionary alternate history of the United States. Agonizingly suspenseful, darkly hilarious, and filled with enough conspiracy theories to thrill the most hardened paranoid, Radio Free Albemuth is proof of Dicks stature as our century's greatest science fiction writer.
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Robots, Androids, and Mechanical Oddities by Philip K. Dick, Martin H. Greenberg, Patricia S. Warrick ( 1984)
Stories deal with a sinister toy soldier, warring robots, a scientist determined to save great music, a robot salesman, a society ruled by machines, and automated factories.
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A Scanner Darkly by Philip K. Dick ( 2006)
A drug dealer of the future periodically moves away from his spaced-out world to become an informer for narcotics agents until he becomes unable to separate his two personalities. Simultaneous. (A Warner Independent Pictures film, written & directed by Richard Linklater, releasing March 2006, starring Keanu Reeves, Winona Ryder, Robert Downey, Jr., Woody Harrelson, & Rory Cochrane) (Science Fiction)
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Second Variety And Other Classic Stories by Philip K. Dick ( 1991)
Philip K. Dick won the prestigious Hugo Award for best novel of 1963 for "The Man In the High Castle", and in the last year of his life (1982), the film "Blade Runner" was made from his novel "Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep". Here Vol. 3 of the late writer's collected work covers the years 1952-1955 and includes "Second Variety", "Foster, You're Dead", and "The Father-Thing" among many others.
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The Selected Letters of Philip K. Dick 1938-1971 by Philip K. Dick ( 1997) |
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Selected Stories of Philip K. Dick by Philip K. Dick ( 2002)
A collection of 23 short stories by author Philip K. Dick.
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The Selected Stories of Philip K. Dick by Philip K. Dick ( 1991)
This collection (Vol. 4) covers the years 1954-1964 and includes such fascinating stories as "Service Call", "Stand By", "The Days of Perky Pat", and many others.
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The Shifting Realities of Philip K. Dick Selected Literary and Philosophical Writings by Philip K. Dick, Lawrence Sutin ( 1996)
Collects articles on science fiction and related topics, chapters from an unfinished novel, excerpts from journals, and other writings.
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The Simulacra by Philip K. Dick ( 2002)
Provides a sardonic look at a not-too-distant future America in which the entire goverment is a fraud and the president of the United States is an android.
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Solar Lottery by Philip K. Dick ( 2003)
The year is 2203, and the ruler of the Universe is chosen according to the random laws of a strange game under the control of Quizmaster Verrick. But when Ted Bentley, a research technician recently dismissed from his job, signs on to work for Verrick, he has no idea that Leon Cartwright is about to become the new Quizmaster. Nor does he know that he’s about to play an integral part in the plot to assassinate Cartwright so that Verrick can resume leadership of a universe not nearly as random as it appears.
Winner of both the Hugo and John W. Campbell awards for best novel, widely regarded as the premiere science fiction writer of his day, and the object of cult-like adoration from his legions of fans, Philip K. Dick has come to be seen in a literary light that defies classification in much the same way as Borges and Calvino. With breathtaking insight, he utilizes vividly unfamiliar worlds to evoke the hauntingly and hilariously familiar in our society and ourselves. |
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The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch by Philip K. Dick ( 2008)
In a Martian colony, life is so harsh that reality-altering drugs are more than desired, and the makers of them wield great power as a result. Then a bizarre new corporate entity arrives bearing an even more powerful drug, one which renders reality completely unimportant.
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Time Out of Joint by Philip K. Dick ( 2002)
Ragel Gumm, who earns his living entering a complex newspaper puzzle contest in 1950s California, discovers that he actually lives in the future and that his contest entries predict missile attacks from the rebel lunar colonists.
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The Transmigration of Timothy Archer by Philip K. Dick ( 1991)
The Transmigration of Timothy Archer, the final novel in the trilogy that also includes Valis and The Divine Invasion, is an anguished, learned, and very moving investigation of the paradoxes of belief. It is the story of Timothy Archer, an urbane Episcopal bishop haunted by the suicides of his son and mistress--and driven by them into a bizarre quest for the identity of Christ.
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Ubik by Philip K. Dick ( 2009)
Another of Dick's studies of shifting realities, "Ubik" examines the after-death experiences of a group of accident fatalities, which are stored in a machine capable of generating its own versions of reality and fact.
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Ubik by Philip K. Dick ( 1991)
Philip K. Dick's searing metaphysical comedy of death and salvation is a tour de force of panoramic menace and unfettered slapstick, in which the departed give business advice, shop for their next incarnation, and run the continual risk of dying yet again.
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Ubik, the Screenplay by Philip K. Dick ( 1985) |
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Valis by Philip K. Dick ( 1991)
Valis is the first book in Philip K. Dick's incomparable final trio of novels (the others being are The Divine Invasion and The Transmigration of Timothy Archer). This disorienting and bleakly funny work is about a schizophrenic hero named Horselover Fat; the hidden mysteries of Gnostic Christianity; and reality as revealed through a pink laser. Valis is a theological detective story, in which God is both a missing person and the perpetrator of the ultimate crime."The fact that what Dick is entertaining us about is reality and madness, time and death, sin and salvation--this has escaped most critics. Nobody notices that we have our own homegrown Borges, and have had him for thirty years."--Ursula K. Le Guin, New Republic
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Vintage Pkd by Philip K. Dick ( 2006)
A visionary collection of literary works by the legendary science fiction writer includes excerpts from such novels as Valis, Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep, The Man in the High Castle, Ubik, and Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch, as well as the stories "I Hope I Shall Arrive Soon" and "The Days of Perky Pat," and previously unpublished material. Original.
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Voices from the Street by Philip K. Dick ( 2007)
In 1950s Oakland, California, Stuart Hadley, a young radio electronics salesman, risks his perfect life--a nice house, pretty wife, and decent job--as his growing anger, anxiety, and fear, and his resulting quest to fill the void with drinking, sex, and religious fanaticism threatens everything around him. By the author of
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Voices from the Street by Philip K. Dick ( 2007)
In 1950s Oakland, California, Stuart Hadley, a young radio electronics salesman, risks his perfect life--a nice house, pretty wife, and decent job--as his growing anger, anxiety, and fear, and his resulting quest to fill the void with drinking, sex, and religious fanaticism, threaten everything around him, in the first edition of a previously unpublished novel by the author of Blade Runner. 50,000 first printing.
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Vulcan's Hammer by Philip K. Dick ( 2004)
Objective, unbiased and hyperrational, the Vulcan 3 should have been the perfect ruler. The omnipotent computer dictates policy that is in the best interests of all citizens—or at least, that is the idea. But when the machine, whose rule evolved out of chaos and war, begins to lose control of the “Healer” movement of religious fanatics and the mysterious force behing their rebellion, all Hell breaks loose.
Written in 1960, Philip K. Dick’s paranoid novel imagines a totalitarian state in which hammer-headed robots terrorize citizens and freedom is an absurd joke. William Barrios, the morally conflicted hero, may be the only person who can prevent the battle for control from destroying the world—if, that is, he can decide which side he’s on. Winner of both the Hugo and John W. Campbell awards for best novel, widely regarded as the premiere science fiction writer of his day, and the object of cult-like adoration from his legions of fans, Philip K. Dick has come to be seen in a literary light that defies classification in much the same way as Borges and Calvino. With breathtaking insight, he utilizes vividly unfamiliar worlds to evoke the hauntingly and hilariously familiar in our society and ourselves. |
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We Can Build You by Philip K. Dick ( 1994)
Louis Rosen and his partners sell people--ingeniously designed, historically authentic simulacra of personages such as Edwin M. Stanton and Abraham Lincoln. The problem is that the only prospective buyer is a rapacious billionaire whose plans for the simulacra could land Louis in jail. Then there's the added complication that someone--or something--like Abraham Lincoln may not want to be sold.Is an electronic Lincoln any less alive than his creators? Is a machine that cares and suffers inferior to the woman Louis loves--a borderline psychopath who does neither? With irresistible momentum, intelligence, and wit, Philip K. Dick creates an arresting techno-thriller that suggests a marriage of Bladerunner and Barbarians at the Gate.
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We Can Remember It for You Wholesale by Philip K. Dick ( 1990)
The Philip K. Dick Award is given annually to a distinguished work of science fiction, and the Philip K. Dick Society is devoted to the study and promulgation of the late writer's work. Vol. 2 of this collection features "We Can Remember It For You Wholesale", "The Cookie Lady", "The World She Wanted", and many others.
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Welcome to Reality The Nightmares of Philip K. Dick by ( 1991) |
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Welcome to Reality The Nightmares of Philip K. Dick by ( 1991) |
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What If Our World Is Their Heaven? The Final Conversations With Phillip K. Dick by Philip K. Dick, Tim Powers, Gwen Lee, Doris Elaine Sauter, Elaine Sauter ( 2001)
This book is comprised from a series of interviews conducted with Dick several months before his death in 1983, covering such subjects as the mystical event that he believed he experienced--and wrote at great length about--and a forthcoming novel that was never completed.
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The Zap Gun by Philip K. Dick ( 2002)
Scaldingly sarcastic yet enduringly empathetic, The Zap Gun is Dick’s remarkable novel depicting the insanity of the arms race. Lars Powderdry and Lilo Topchev are counterpart weapons fashion designers for a world divided into two factions–Wes-bloc and Peep-East. Since the Plowshare Protocols of 2002, their job has been to invent elaborate weapons that only seem massively lethal. But when alien satellites hostile to both sides appear in the sky, the two are brought together in the dire hope that they can create a weapon to save the world, a task made all the more difficult by Lars falling in love with Lilo even as he knows she’s trying to kill him.
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