"Without Warning" by John Birmingham
Paul J. McAuley: Four Hundred Billion Stars
Paul J. McAuley: Four Hundred Billion Stars
Read his Cowboy Angels and liked it. How's this one?
Paul J. McAuley: Four Hundred Billion Stars
Read his Cowboy Angels and liked it. How's this one?
Average so far. Not bad, but also nothing special. But I just started reading it.
That was in my edition as well. On some level it’s really difficult to imagine the kind of life PKD must have lived. Fear and anxiety or ‘angst’ definitely seem to have been part of it as much as they were part of his books.In the edition of The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldrich that I read the foreword related the tale of how PKD wrote the book. He found it impossible to write at home because his family were too much of a distraction, so every working day he walked down the road to a little bungalow where he'd set up an office. At the time he was heavily into drugs and every day on the walk down that road he had hallucinatory visions of a wrathful God with a metallic face glaring down at him from the sky. He wrote the novel in a state of terror, and once it was in galley form he never read it again because of how much fear it produced in him.
That’s definitely something that permeates much of his work. Some of the ideas he develops in the process are truly fascinating, I think. I remember, for example, being extremely intrigued by the “… the Empire never ended …” quote and what it meant in “Valis”. Now THAT was an idea to contemplate.I think that this is supported by the sidebar about the cigarette lighter [there is no difference between the two lighters, ultimately; the difference is all in our minds, which implies that it may be just a delusion] and by the rest of Dick's work, which always seems to play with the issue of whether we can trust that what we see is true given how flawed our means of cognition is. [As in We Can Remember It For You Wholesale and other works.]
Which in itself is partly a take on the irreality of the novel. How history would really progress had the Nazis won, and how a Philip K. Dick novel would depict that victory, are two different things.I loved that particular angle, the alternate history novel within the alternate history. Plus it’s fascinating that it doesn’t simply describe our ‘real’ history but yet another alternate history. It almost makes you wonder if somewhere within “The Man in the High Castle” our history shines through somewhere.
Two more, only one of which is written by Adams.The book reads like an end to the series, even though there are three more books.
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