• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

The Man in the High Castle

DarthPipes

Vice Admiral
Admiral
I recently started reading the books of Philip K. Dick. Started off with Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? which I enjoyed and just finished a few hours ago The Man in the High Castle. I also enjoyed this book, finding it compelling and full of excellent characterization. Still, I'm not quite sure what to make of the end...

Anyone else here read this book?
 
I read it and never got why its s'posed to be so good. I've read better alt history stories.
 
I read it and never got why its s'posed to be so good. I've read better alt history stories.
The mistake is that you approached it as an alternate history. High Castle has the superficial trappings of an alt-history, but that's not PKD's point. He doesn't care whether or not his alt-history is plausible, because it's not. He's more concerned with what do people do when they live in an insane, unreal world? It's a familiar theme in his work; the world feels wrong, and the characters confront the wrongness of the world, until they peek through the barriers and see the way things should be. In some books (Time Out of Joint, which The Truman Show borrowed heavily from), the perceived world is largely artificial. In other books (The Three Stigmata), the real world can be accessed through drugs. In High Castle, the real world can be accessed through the I Ching, which reveals the truth of the world's unreality. This is why the ending of the book is so unsatisfying on first read; even the knowledge that the world is wrong doesn't effect a change, because it can't. Just being able to see the bars of the Black Iron Prison (a term that won't show up in PKD's work for another decade) doesn't remove the bars. The unreality is still real.
 
^ It's also worth noting, with respect to alt-hist, that while Dick certainly wasn't the first to exercise such speculations, Man in the High Castle is one of the earliest high-profile examples of the genre. We were recently discussing how one has to situate Snow Crash chronologically to appreciate the innovations there that become a staple of its genre; so, to, does High Castle popularize an idea that then gets refined by later writers, to the point that Dick's scenario has now become one of--if not the--biggest cliché for an alt-hist premise.

Fictitiously yours, Trent Roman
 
I've never read this book. I did enjoy The Unteleported Man and Counter-Clock World, although those seem rather less 'weird' than some of PKD's works so that's probably why I liked them. (Warning, though, to those who have never read CCW: Don't even think about what 'sogum' really is. Just don't.)

(Although once all the spacey drug trip scenes are edited back into TPM to become Lies, Inc. it does go way the hell into left field. "Acrid smoke billowed about him"...)
 
Dick's Wiki biography has some quotes about the book, its ending, and why he never wrote a sequel. Interesting stuff.

I definitely agree this book was about how people lived in this alternate history as opposed to the alternate history itself.
 
Dick's Wiki biography has some quotes about the book, its ending, and why he never wrote a sequel. Interesting stuff.
The first two chapters of the sequel were published about ten years ago in a collection Lawrence Sutin put together, The Shifting Realities of Philip K. Dick.

I didn't find them that interesting, and I'm not sure where PKD would have gone with the story.
 
Dick's Wiki biography has some quotes about the book, its ending, and why he never wrote a sequel. Interesting stuff.
The first two chapters of the sequel were published about ten years ago in a collection Lawrence Sutin put together, The Shifting Realities of Philip K. Dick.

I didn't find them that interesting, and I'm not sure where PKD would have gone with the story.

Just read those two chapters a little while ago. I really enjoyed them and I'm sure PKD never completed the sequel.
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top