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Coll. P K Dick #4-minority Rep
 
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Coll. P K Dick #4-minority Rep [Paperback]

Dick
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (15 customer reviews)
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Product Description

Review

"More than anyone else in the field, Mr. Dick really puts you inside people's minds." -- The Wall Street Journal

"Philip K. Dick is awe-inspiring." -- The Washington Post --This text refers to the Audio Cassette edition.

Book Description

The Philip K. Dick Award is given annually to a distinguished work of science fiction, and the Philip K. Dick Society is devoted to the study and promulgation of the late writer's work. This collection (Volume 4) covers the years 1954-1964 and includes such fascinating stories as "Service Call", "Stand By", "The Days of Perky Pat", and many others.

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Customer Reviews

15 Reviews
5 star:
 (4)
4 star:
 (8)
3 star:
 (3)
2 star:    (0)
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Average Customer Review
4.1 out of 5 stars (15 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3.0 out of 5 stars Miss O's review, Feb 22 2004
This review is from: Coll. P K Dick #4-minority Rep (Paperback)
Minority Report was a very interesting book. It kept me on the edge of my seat, and it threw many unexpected twists at me. John Anderton, a respectable chief of police,is accused of a murder that hasn't even happened yet, and he will stop at nothing to prove his innocence. Leopold Kaplin (Anderton's victim) will stop at nothing to see that Anderton is detained and that the pre-crime system is proven to be a failure. Anderton suspects his wife, Lisa, and his new "co-worker" Witwar are behind the strange accusation of his murder. This book is full of lies and deceit, and in the end Anderton doesn't know whom to trust. The three pre-cogs hold the secret to Anderton's fate...does Anderton really murder Kaplin??...Or does he get the information he needs just in time? Read Minority Report to find out!
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4.0 out of 5 stars A Must for the Dick Fan. Good Intro for Dick Neophyte, Jan 30 2004
By 
Randy Stafford (St. Paul, MN USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Coll. P K Dick #4-minority Rep (Paperback)
It's tempting to say that these stories from 1954, 1955, 1958, and 1963 represent great periods of prolific creativity for Dick and the working out of themes and ideas that later found their way into his more famous novels. But Dick was more often than not prolific and frequently recycled motifs and themes and even character names from stories into novels. What the Dick scholar will find here is a growing emphasis, at least in the short story format, on illusion and fakery, the seeds of some of Dick's novels, and, for the first time, stories which convey the frequent despair and desperation of those novels.

But the Dick fan and scholar is going to read this collection as a matter of course. What does it offer for those just discovering Dick or his casual readers?

Of course, there is the famous title story. However, with it, Dick seems more interested in posing a logic puzzle based on the implications of precognition than making a serious political statement even though the story features much more political intrigue than the movie based on it. Indeed, with it and several Dick stories here, one gets the sense that the political struggles between various government agencies owe a lot to a study of the Soviet Union or, more probably, the Third Reich. There are other minor stories: "Stand-By" and a rare sequel, "What'll We Do With Ragland Park?". Their main attraction is Dick's weird speculation on future media -- prophecies which don't seem far from the mark 40 years later. The "news clown" of these stories doesn't seem, apart from his makeup, that different from our late night comedy hosts in America. But then the listings in _TV Guide_ often remind me of Dick. They also show Dick's fondness for theorizing odd mutations of American government. Here the President has been replaced by computer.

In "Novelty Act", the nation is ruled by a permanent First Lady who inflicts her cultural tastes on America via public tv. She's mistress, wife, and mother to the nation, many of whom long to audition their talents at the White House. Later incorporated into the novel _The Simulacra_, it is the first story of Dick's that doesn't just mention the despair and desperation of its hero but induces them in the reader as effectively as many of his novels do.

There's also some political fakery afoot in the story and that theme is echoed in "The Mold of Yancy" (reworked for _The Penultimate Truth_), which features a culture built around a doggedly anodyne Eisenhowerish everyman, and "If There Were No Benny Cemoli". The latter is one of the book's highlights and, against a background of searching for war criminals on a devastated Earth, built around the proposition that reality is what the _New York Times_ says it is. The spirit of a dead businessman haunts the mediasphere and a political convention in "What the Dead Man Say". It reminded me of some of the loas in early William Gibson.

Fakery of a forensic sort is the idea of "The Unreconstructed M". The idea of a robot built to leave clues designed to frame someone for murder was intriguing. However, because the story goes on too long and into unnecessary tangents, this is also minor Dick.

At this point in the short story part of his career, Dick seems to be less interested in mutants and berserk machines than before. Still, we get an automated command and control economy that needs reprogramming in "Autofac", and "Recall Mechanism" explores the link between precognitive mutants and certain psychological tics.

The science fiction story device used most often here is time travel. "Service Call" has some engineers getting a disturbing glimpse at the future of conformity machinery. Or, as the ad says, "Why be half loyal?". "Captive Market" has a miserly shopkeeper who only sees a profit where others see a horrifying future.

Time travel gets mixed with meta-science fiction in a couple of uncharacteristic Dick stories. In "Waterspider", time travelers come back to snatch Dick's friend Poul Anderson because, you see, all science fiction writers are unconscious precognitives, and they need his help on an experimental space project. This story drops plenty of famous names and even mentions Dick's inspiration, A. E. van Vogt. "Orpheus with Clay Feet" works a witty variation on the idea of time travelers meeting famous artists of the past. Here uncreative people like our protagonist can take solace in inspiring great works of art if not creating them. At least, that's how it's supposed to work. Here the artist is the greatest science fiction writer of all time, Jack Dowland.

"Explorers We", somewhere in the middle range of quality, strikes one as a _Twilight Zone_ episode about aliens' failure to communicate. "Oh, To Be a Blobel!" is a story probably more famous then it deserves to be. Judging from Dick's notes as to his intentions, it's mostly a failure to illustrate the Nietzsche maxim about becoming a dragon when battling dragons. However, it works on other levels.

Along with "If There Were No Benny Cemoli", the gem of the collection is "The Days of Perky Pat". While children roam a landscape blighted by nuclear war and engage in useful pursuits like hunting and making knives, their parents are underground and expending their energy on making elaborate layouts for their Barbie-like Perky Pat dolls. Their infantile obsession with recreating the minutia of a vanished world is enabled by handy care packages dropped by benovelent Martians. Dick has some weirdly plausible things to say about play and the role of toys in our lives and mental health. This story also inspired Dick's _The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch_.

In some ways, the variety of themes here dilutes the power of Dick's typical obsessions, especially the metaphor of machine as an anti-life force. There are also fewer really exceptional stories here than in the earlier volumes of this series. However, it is still as good an introduction to Dick as some of the collections he edited himself.

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3.0 out of 5 stars Don't Start Here, Jan 5 2004
This review is from: Coll. P K Dick #4-minority Rep (Paperback)
It is unfortunate that the movie Minority Report will result in many readers first exposure to Dick being this book. This is nothing like the movie so viewers will be disappointed... plus he has done better as a writer.

This is a collection of short stories. You will recognise these stories as the bare bones from which numerous movie scripts have been developed. The stories show Dick's originality but also expose his weakness in terms of handling plot development and compositional devices to enhance the story line.

As we have witnessed how his stories have been manipulated, enhanced and embellished for the screen, it's obvious to see that what we're getting with this collection is a very basic treatment of each story's potential. I believe they show Dick to have a great imagination but to be only an average writer.

I greatly enjoyed "Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep" which shows much greater depth as a writer. If you haven't read Dick before I recommend you start there and leave this one to hard core fans.

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