Hallucination, paranoia, and other fringe benefits

Oct 25, 2015 15:22

I was noting on the Book of Faces that Amazon's video production of Philip K. Dick's The Man in the High Castle manages to pull off the feat of being both better than the book (which won the Hugo for best novel back in 1963 when the Hugos still meant something) and at the same time being even more paranoid and hallucinatory than Dick's later works ( Read more... )

books, back in the day

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meep October 25 2015, 22:31:10 UTC
Ooooh, I hadn't read Deus Irae yet -- thanks for the list.

My jackpot was from when I spent a summer in the bay area (for math stuff) and found one of the used bookstores in Berkeley had an extensive PKD selection.

And I bought them out.

But it wasn't everything, obviously.

Most of those paperbacks I bought back then have since disintegrated. But I've seen PKD having a comeback and lots of reprints to be had.

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wombat_socho October 25 2015, 22:54:51 UTC
I was rather disappointed in Dies Irae, actually. I liked Zelazny a lot, and what I'd seen from PKD was good, and, well, in my opinion the total was a lot less than the sum of its parts.

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meep October 25 2015, 23:27:07 UTC
thanks for the warning (but I'll read it anyway)

I'm a big fan of both PKD & Zelazny...but yeah not every collaboration works

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wombat_socho October 26 2015, 02:39:47 UTC
I'm not saying you shouldn't read it. I just hope you're not disappointed by it.

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