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The Cosmic Puppets
  

The Cosmic Puppets (Paperback)

by Philip K. Dick (Author)
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Product Description

Yielding to a compulsion he can’t explain, Ted Barton interrupts his vacation in order to visit the town of his birth, Millgate, Virginia. But upon entering the sleepy, isolated little hamlet, Ted is distraught to find that the place bears no resemblance to the one he left behind—and never did. He also discovers that in this Millgate Ted Barton died of scarlet fever when he was nine years old. Perhaps even more troubling is the fact that it is literally impossible to escape. Unable to leave, Ted struggles to find the reason for such disturbing incongruities, but before long, he finds himself in the midst of a struggle between good and evil that stretches far beyond the confines of the valley.

Winner of both the Hugo and John W. Campbell awards for best novel, widely regarded as the premiere science fiction writer of his day, and the object of cult-like adoration from his legions of fans, Philip K. Dick has come to be seen in a literary light that defies classification in much the same way as Borges and Calvino. With breathtaking insight, he utilizes vividly unfamiliar worlds to evoke the hauntingly and hilariously familiar in our society and ourselves. --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.


About the Author

Philip K. Dick was born in Chicago in 1928 and lived most of his life in California. He briefly attended the University of California, but dropped out before completing any classes. In 1952, he began writing professionally and proceeded to write numerous novels and short story collections. He won the Hugo Award for the best novel in 1962 for The Man in the High Castle and the John W. Campbell Memorial Award for best novel of the year in 1974 for Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said. Philip K. Dick died on March 2, 1982, in Santa Ana, California, of heart failure following a stroke. --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

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3.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4.0 out of 5 stars Cosmic entertainment, Jun 2 2004
By Doug Mackey (Fairfield, IA USA) - See all my reviews
This is the only full-lenth fantasy that Dick wrote; the rest are either science fiction or mainstream. But this present-day small-town setting in which magic works has much in common with his many future worlds in which the magic is supplied by altered states of consciousness, time paradoxes, and alien gods. Here a man named Ted Barton returns to his hometown of Millgate, Virginia, for the first time since he was a child, and finds that the streets, landmarks, stores, and people are all different. Although all small American towns are interchangeable to some extent, this goes too far, particularly when he finds an old newspaper record of his death at age nine. Somehow Barton has entered an alternate universe, one in which he is no longer supposed to exist. He becomes obsessed with the need to verify his own existence, and soon discovers himself in the middle of a sort of Armageddon, where the cosmic forces of darkness and light are fighting it out. This is an early Dick novel that prefigures many of the themes of his later fiction, and is consistently entertaining.
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3.0 out of 5 stars 3 stars but read it anyway, Feb 26 2004
By A Customer
With due deference to the other reviewers (who have read more Philip Dick than I have) I still must say that, one third into this novel, I fell asleep. Which I generally due, to the best of books. And my sleep involved a dream in which I returned to the town I grew up in, a now vastly changed northern NJ town a few miles from NYC. Nothing was as I remembered it. And this is something of the plot of Cosmic Puppets. Whether it is written to evoke such dreams or mine happened by coincidence, who knows. I only know I never want to go back, in dreams or otherwise, but I definitely do want to go forward reading more of Philip Dick.
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