View Full Version :
Rob B
May 16th, 2002, 02:53 AM
So, PKD is one of the most respected SF authors, Ever. He's got an award named after him. Movies have been made of his work (Total Recal, Minority Report), yet not many people here seem to mention him.
In the US Vintage books has been bringing alot of his stuff back into print, and I guess with the impending release of Minority Report, they've issued some more of his titles. of which Dr. Bloodmoney is one I'm looking to pick up fairly soon.
What have people here read of him?
Myself, embarrasingly little--
The Eye in the Sky
The Man in the High Castle
The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldrich.
Any thoughts on his books, either those above or any others from his wide breadth of work?
asimovian
May 16th, 2002, 06:54 AM
I must have read one or two books by him, but it's a long time ago... I don't remember.
I remember though the impression I got from reading some of his work (or maybe parts of a book).
You know, artists are commonly supposed to be a little disturbed people who lead bohemian lives and have the greatest problems adapting to "normal" life and people. Well, in that sense there is something "artistic" about what he writes (as far as I can see, of course). What he is writing, is not just science-fiction. The impression that I got, was that the writer must, to some degree, have been a kind of tormented soul - not the H.P. Lovecraft kind - and might even have suffered agony while writing his book (think of a chicken trying to lay a cubical egg... although this may not do justice to his qualities as a writer).
At any rate, I feel that Philip K. Dick is something for the more complex personality kind of reader.
Rob B
May 16th, 2002, 07:15 AM
From what I've gathered, PKD was an active drug user, and that comes across in his fiction very clearly and sometimes deliberately. He did did spend the majority of his writing career in the 60s and 70s.
That doesn't disqualify the validity of his label as a master of the genre.
toriphile
May 16th, 2002, 09:19 AM
Dr. Bloodmoney is a shockingly beautiful story.
PKD is the most thorough 'researcher' of the human psyche (along with Delany) in the SF field. He is also the one whose works deal with reality (and what is behind it), time, the connection Man-God, drugs and their effect on the mind...
I've read 15 of his novels and many short stories and they all range from very good to excellent. He's a master of sarcasm and irony. Very, very good author :-)
I strongly recommend any of the following books by PKD:
UBIK
A Scanner Darkly
The Clans of the Alphane Moon (my favourite)
Our Friends From Frolix 8
A Maze of Death
The Zap Gun
Now Wait For Last Year
and the absolute classic - Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? on which the BladeRunner movie is based.
asimovian
May 21st, 2002, 12:28 AM
Drugs ? Well, FitzFlagg, that would account for it.
And of course I agree that this has nothing to do with his mastership.
Personally, I didn't feel attracted to his style. It's more something for somewhat tortuous minds.
SusF
May 21st, 2002, 04:52 AM
I am sure I've read more Dick then just Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep, but I have long since forgotten.
I really need to do a huge batch of SF re-reading. My memory needs a refresher course in classic SF.
Susan
sueVee
May 21st, 2002, 12:02 PM
Susan - I am with you. I KNOW I have read his books, but it was probably longer than most of you are old!!! This summer may be my sci fi refresher course 101. Sue
Llama
May 21st, 2002, 01:50 PM
PKD wasn't a particularly competent stylist, but he had wonderful ideas and I think he remains one of the most influential SF writers. All Dick is worth reading (even hackwork like Cosmic Puppets), but the key novels are probably Do Androids...?, Time out of Joint, Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch, A Scanner Darkly, Flow my Tears the Policeman Said, Dr. Bloodmoney, and Ubik.
Dick had a mental breakdown late in his life and the novels he wrote during this time, like Valis and Divine Invasion, I am less a fan of.
It was certainly an interesting breakdown, though. R. Crumb wrote and drew a little story on it for the underground comics mag WEIRDO mag which can be found here:
http://www.philipkdick.com/weirdo.htm
fluffy bunny
November 13th, 2002, 04:52 PM
Read A scanner darkly, and Minority report (the book which came out after the film, with a selection of short stories taken from his short story collections - minority report, imposter and something, something wholesale are the most memorable from there if I remember right)
I quite like his writing style, and have been told to look for 'the man in the high castle,' The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldrich', and the rest of his short stories.
He wrote bloomin good novels despite the drug use thing.
Shehzad
November 13th, 2002, 06:09 PM
I've read Eye in the Sky which is quirky but interesting (words which probably describe most of his writing!). Also Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? which I think should be read as an entity separate from the movie. I really want to get my hands on A Scanner Darkly which has been highly praised.
vBulletin® v3.8.4, Copyright ©2000-2012, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.