|
| If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|||||||
| Register | FAQ | Members List | Calendar | Mark Forums Read |
![]() |
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Search this Thread | Display Modes |
|
|||
|
Quote:
About Dick , i liked "Solar Lottery" and "Three stigmata of Palmer Eldrich" (What a tittle !) Some short stories i read in French in the French edition of Galaxy magazine were good too. Red galacsi |
|
||||
|
I missed reading him, only because I had a full plate already. Dad was a big Sci-fi fan, as was my older brother. So I had a big library to read through as it was.
__________________
"The beauty of that discussion of averages is that you don't have to be an expert in Apollo or in photography in order to see where this time study "analysis" breaks down. You just have to be, well...not an idiot." -JayUtah |
|
|||
|
Quote:
A different choice from earlier in his career is Clans of the Alphane Moon. There's also The Man in the High Castle, which won him a Hugo, though I've never read that one.
__________________
"All your bias are belong to us." Ara Pacis "A witty saying proves nothing." Voltaire |
|
||||
|
The Man in the High Castle was the only PKD novel I've read. I found it to be a bit stilted, and I prefer novels that flow, so I've never read any of his other works.
__________________
I am Mugs, of the Alien clan of Usa, Nordamerica, a Terran, of Sol. Perception isn't reality. It's merely an abstraction thereof, and quite often not a very good one at that. I am human. Fully human. |
|
||||
|
Quote:
galacsi, if you want your head twisted I can recommend: Anything by Micheal Moorcock. Read all his stuff when I was a teen. Wow, it still messes with me. Robert Jordan's Gods of Flux and Anchor. Don't read that one if you are already stressed. One of those stories where only in a work of fiction could people stay that stressed out for that long.
__________________
"The beauty of that discussion of averages is that you don't have to be an expert in Apollo or in photography in order to see where this time study "analysis" breaks down. You just have to be, well...not an idiot." -JayUtah |
|
||||
|
Ubik it is. I've been looking to add to my collection lately.
*used to own about 900 books back in '01. Donated all but a hundred to the local library when I moved. Back up to a few hundred again, and slowly increasing.
__________________
This signature has been compressed due to rising photon costs. |
|
||||
|
I enjoy his shorter work best. A shot, not the whole bottle. But I read Ubik as a lad, and Galactic Pot Healer, some others. My SS favorites are probably "The Preserving Machine" and "Faith of Our Fathers". Both quite disturbing to me.
__________________
The Devil offered me power. I told him I preferred aperture. |
|
||||
|
I have only read The Man in the High Castle. It was ok, but the dialog seemed unnatural (did people really talk like that in the 1960s?) and it seemed to end abruptly. It hinted that one character had temporarily shifted into our reality (where the Allies won WWII) but it didn't follow through with that... it just ended. I've heard PKD had started to write a sequel but it ended up becoming a totally different story (I can't remember which one).
I started to read Counter-Clock World but it was just too weird. If time was moving backwards (or whatever, I didn't get far enough into it to find out exactly what was going on) wouldn't people be talking backwards, walking backwards, unlearning things, etc? It just didn't work. It might have worked better as a zombie story without the backwards time element.
__________________
" We choose to go to the moon. We choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard..." - John F. Kennedy TheSpaceRace.com |
|
||||
|
I like PKD quite a lot; his characters are more interesting than most SF writers because they are often way out-of-kilter with the 'real' world. Electric Sheep and High Castle are favourites, but I really like his non-SF work 'Confessions of a Crap Artist' with its insider depiction of a minor end-of-the-world cult.
|
|
||||
|
The book "Blade Runner" is convoluted, gripping, twisted and dark and really holds up well. The movie is good too - well, the director's cut that is.
__________________
"Insignificant molehill sometimes more important than conspicuous mountain." - Charlie Chan |
|
|||
|
Quote:
Maybe I will try the movie 'Blade Runner' next and see how weird that is > ![]()
__________________
Out of my mind. Back in five minutes. |
|
|||
|
It did take me a while to get to like Ubik. I was put off by the enigmatic ending, the first time I read it. Nowadays, I think the ending is what makes it all jell.
![]() I second mike alexander's suggestion of checking out his short stories. Regarding his later work, much of it is semiautobiographical, and therefore more interesting when you've already got into the author, but The Divine Invasion is an accessible exception.
__________________
"All your bias are belong to us." Ara Pacis "A witty saying proves nothing." Voltaire |
|
||||
|
I 've not read much Moorcock, but what I've read (the early Elric short stories plus The Dreamthief's Daughter) didn't strike me as particularly weird or out there. Is the rest of his work trippier?
__________________
Far out in the uncharted backwaters of the unfashionable end of the western spiral arm of the Galaxy lies a small unregarded yellow sun. Orbiting this at a distance of roughly ninety-two million miles is an utterly insignificant little blue green planet whose ape-descended life forms are so amazingly primitive that they still think digital watches are a pretty neat idea. |