Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep
by Philip K. Dick
Del Rey
(244 pages)
Keyword(s): Speculative fiction
Dates read: April 19-23, 1996,
Rating:
This, of course, was the basis for the wonderful Blade Runner movie. The movie is faithful to the tone of the book, and to many of the details. I wish that both had concentrated a bit more on the moral issues that might arise when there are manufactured people who are nearly indistinguishable from humans. The book deals with those issues more directly, but not to my satisfaction. Dick's prose is uncomplicated and straightforward — his main strength seems to lie in the creation of morally interesting plot elements.
The Man in the High Castle
by Philip K. Dick
Vintage Books
(259 pages)
Keyword(s): Speculative fiction
Dates read: February 09-16, 1996,
Rating:
This book is an attempt to visualize what might have happened if Germany and Japan had "won" World War II. The "reality shift" themes and the theme of dependence on an oracle are particulary interesting, displaying Dick's sharp understanding and rather deep thinking. I'm impressed by Dick's writing (this was my first exposure to it), and I look forward to reading more.
The Philip K. Dick Reader
by Philip K. Dick
Citadel Trade
(410 pages)
Keyword(s): Short stories, Speculative fiction
Dates read: February 09-22, 2004,
Rating:
I'm a casual fan of Philip K. Dick's work. I very much enjoyed A Scanner Darkly, Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep, and The Man in the High Castle, and I love the movies Blade Runner and Minority Report , so I approached this collection with elevated expectations.
Naturally, I was disappointed. The book doesn't provide any contextual material for the included stories — there is no preface, no appendix, not a single introduction — indeed, there is not even a listing of previous publication dates. So, without doing additional research, we're given no clue where these stories fall in Dick's oeuvre. I suspect that some of these stories are from early on in his career, because they seem a bit juvenile, but I honestly don't care enough to dig up the information myself. Dick's typical themes are present here, including inability to distinguish man from machine, time paradox, exaggeration and juxtaposition of cultures, etc., but they are more fully realized in his novels. Most of the included stories sport twist endings that may have been surprising when these stories were first released, but they are entirely predictable today. A punchline doesn't always work so well when you see it coming.
Philip K. Dick was a writer with wonderful ideas, and he could execute a fairly intricate plot to make a (sometimes) deep philosophical point, but he was not a prose artist by any stretch of the term. I don't remember his novels well enough to make a fair comparison to the stories, but I vaguely remember them being better than this.
A Scanner Darkly
by Philip K. Dick
Vintage Books
(278 pages)
Keyword(s): Speculative fiction
Dates read: August 27 - October 15, 1996,
Rating:
A Scanner Darkly is an excellent novel about drugs and the symbiotic relationship between law enforcement and drug users. It sports a great plot twist at the end as well.




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