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Dr. Bloodmoney
  

Dr. Bloodmoney (Paperback)

by Philip K. Dick (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)

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Product Description

Books in Canada

Dick began writing in the 1950s, a decade haunted by the Cold War and a decade which witnessed the blossoming of science fiction. While this form of literature was already haunting the margins of culture as early as 1926, when Hugo Gernsback identified it as "scientifiction", it was the terror of science gone mad-the atomic bomb-that gave science fiction its first, heroin-like shot in the arm.
Fear of the bomb is omnipresent in Dick's work, but perhaps his strongest expression of this Cold War terror comes in 1965's Dr. Bloodmoney. Written in the wake of the Cuban Missile Crisis, Dr. Bloodmoney is an attempt to somehow control the fear of a world teetering on the brink of nuclear war. In a fittingly Nietzschean gesture, Dick decides to drop the dreaded bomb. His evocation of the H-bomb's explosion over San Francisco in the opening pages of the novel is shattering, and we follow the shaken cast of survivors in their slow struggle to recover and rebuild.
These survivors include the eponymous and unbalanced Dr. Bluthgeld whose earlier atomic test for the U.S. government had unforeseen lethal consequences. He believes that he has triggered the atomic holocaust with the power of his mind, and the weight of this responsibility crushes him. But he also perceives himself as the reluctant executor of a terrible judgement against humanity. Thus, in this one character, Dick precariously balances the forces at play in the Cold War: the insupportable burden of possessing nuclear weapons, the existence of "lofty reasons" for the potential use of them, and the fear that decision-making power is exercised by mentally-ill individuals. Dick further heightens the reader's sense of the fragility of the nuclear situation by having Dr. Stockstill-unsubtly portrayed and named to form the solid centre around which the survivors gather-muse that the inevitability of nuclear war is a natural phenomenon, and that the very existence and proliferation of these weapons necessarily reaches a critical mass after which they irreversibly come into use. Against such an inexorable natural process, Dick holds up another: the sense of strength and healing that comes from community. Dick hopes for nothing more than a balancing of forces, which is hinted at by one of his favourite words-homeostatic. This word is highlighted during the tableau that concludes the novel: one of the survivors watches a homeostatic trap chase a pair of mutated bulldogs, but the trap is too slow to catch them. Yet the survivor knows that the trap will never abandon the chase. The tableau presents a balance emblematic of the stability that the characters in the novel strive for, and that the Cold War world sought as well.
Patrick R. Burger (Books in Canada) --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.


From Library Journal

Written in the late 1950s and early 1960s, these titles follow Dick's familiar theme that things and people are not quite what and who they seem, basically challenging reality. Though dead for 20 years now, Dick still is hugely popular among sf readers and Blade Runner nuts, so pop for these.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

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Customer Reviews

17 Reviews
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5.0 out of 5 stars A myriad of intermingling warps, Jun 15 2004
By Doug Mackey (Fairfield, IA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Dr. Bloodmoney (Paperback)
Dr. Bloodmoney, or How We Got Along After the Bomb, was published in 1965, and owed its title to the inspiration of Stanley Kubrick's film Dr. Strangelove, or How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb. However, it has no relationship to the film other than the coincidental presence of a mad scientist and a nuclear war. The first third of the novel takes place on the day nuclear bombs strike the San Francisco area; the rest is set years later in western Marin County, where a small community of survivors has adapted to the post-holocaust environment. Perhaps the most surprising feature of this world is how much life is proceeding as normal. There is a large cast of characters through whose eyes we alternately view the events of the story. Among them is Bluthgeld, the scientist who helped create the Bomb, who in his paranoia and solipsism massively affects the reality of the other characters. But each of them subtly touch the lives of all others. Everyone in the book can and does have the power to affect each other's universe, warping each other's everyday reality in many little ways. The post-holocaust setting has its greatest significance in presenting a community, a microcosm of humanity, forming a common reality as the sum of their mutual interexperience.
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3.0 out of 5 stars Either Too Long Or Too Short, Jun 12 2003
By Jacob Baldassini (Sudbury, MA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Dr. Bloodmoney (Paperback)
This book contains a lot of great PKD-style inventions, and he also makes some good points about who we trust and why. A lot of the human interactions in this book are well done, and that is not as common in PKD books as we all would like. However, he introduces too many plot threads and characters. While he has merely a complex cast of characters, the plot goes through way to many twists and turns, and the two interact badly. Either one would be fine, but together, I feel this book would be a lot better if either about twenty-five unneccessary pages were edited out or another fifty pages to use these characters or ideas were added.

Don't get me wrong- PKD did a lot of stuff right in this one. His characters behave like people, when he's looking at the main plot, it shines, and using a disc jockey as the closest thing to God and the U.N. makes for a good book. However, it took a few readings for me to discover what he did right, and at first I was very frustrated with this book. I see that some characters or ideas might make the book feel more detailed, and make the post-holocaust world that much more vivid and gripping, but not to excess. At a point I stopped paying attention to the throwaway characters because their presence served no purpose.

If PKD was better known, then maybe people would be forwarned about the plot, and be able to handle it. I'm not saying that the average reader shouldn't buy this book, I'm just suggesting that the reader have either a background in PKD (you don't need it to understand the plot, but it helps with the general weirdness), a lot of tolerance for a plot that manages to be roundabout without leaving California, or the patience to read this book a couple of times to get a handle on it. Or maybe two of the three.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Philip K. Dick's best novel, Feb 21 2003
By Ross James Browne (Atlanta, Georgia United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Dr. Bloodmoney (Paperback)
Granted, I have only read 7 Philip K. Dick novels, but out of those 7 this one stands out as the best. This novel contains fascinating insights into the concepts of solipsism, megalomania, and paranoia (the self is everything). Dr. Bloodmoney percieves himself to be at the center of the universe, the author of all things, the entire world being a mere projection of his personal subjectivity. Using his power, he creates a nuclear war. So is he crazy, or is he really somehow behind this catastrophe? This is just one of the many interesting subplots we are presented with in this story. There are a number of other characters in this book whose situations are also very compelling, and Philip K. Dick weaves their lives together with the skill of a master storyteller. Dick has an amazing ability to seamlessly meld the tragic and the hilarious, and the end result is one of the greatest sci-fi novels ever written.
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Most recent customer reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars Prejudice, Paranoia, and the Bomb
The first image in this novel is that of a black man named Stuart McConchie sweeping the sidewalk in front of a Berkeley TV shop, eyeing the pretty girls on their way to work and... Read more
Published on Sep 17 2002 by benshlomo

4.0 out of 5 stars It's finally back!
I cannot understand why this Dick book had been out of print for years. Some of his most interesting characters and concepts found in later books evolved from this one, his most... Read more
Published on Aug 9 2002 by thetwonky

4.0 out of 5 stars Not PKD's best, but that's better than most!
"Dr. Bloodmoney" represents Philip K. Dick's stab at the apocalyptic fiction genre. As usual, he enjoys success, and as usual he does so in his own unique way. Read more
Published on Jul 6 2002 by J. N. Mohlman

3.0 out of 5 stars The first draft of a great novel
If I understand aright, PKD's amazing prolicity stemmed largely from the fact that much of his career was spent in grinding poverty, and churning out novel after novel was the... Read more
Published on Jun 12 2002 by G. Moses

4.0 out of 5 stars the perfect Philip K. Dick book for beginners...
Philip K. Dick (PKD) is known for writing very clever, often times too clever, science fiction novels. Read more
Published on Oct 10 2001 by lazza

5.0 out of 5 stars There's hope for humanity after all....
This is probably one of PKD's easiest reads, so save it for the day when you don't want to confront life's difficulties.... Read more
Published on May 27 2001 by alannbennett

2.0 out of 5 stars SF NOVELS OPUS SIXTEEN
I'm sorry to say that I don't agree with most of the reviewers here. I consider Philip K. Dick as the most interesting of the american sci-fi writers but I can not share their... Read more
Published on Dec 23 2000 by wdanthemanw

5.0 out of 5 stars Good Old-Fashioned Made-In-USA Magic Realism
In my opinion, this novel is right up there with Marquez and Borges. It speaks of an alternate post-nuclear-holocaust world where thought is often deed (a paranoid 'Dr... Read more
Published on Sep 5 2000 by S. Claiborne

5.0 out of 5 stars One of the easiest of PKD's Books
This is one of the easiest of PKD's books to read. While still maintaining the depth of thematic apperception, as well as the plotting and ideation that is characteristic of... Read more
Published on Feb 11 2000

4.0 out of 5 stars Post-war dream
If animals could write reviews, they would rather do something else, and if you can read, here is a book.
Published on Jan 28 1999

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