- Unknown Binding
- Publisher: Kerosina Books (1 Jan 1987)
- ISBN-10: 0948893141
- ISBN-13: 978-0948893148
- Average Customer Review: 3.6 out of 5 stars See all reviews (26 customer reviews)
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After a series of mental traumas and breakdowns Horselover Fat (Dick himself)discovers a cipher hidden in the most banal representations of reality that unlocks the secrets to the universe. Completely confused Fat stumbles from revelation to realisation, constructing complex cosmologies on the way and dicovering the true purpose of the universe and the reasons for all the mistakes.
Along the way he utterly confounds therapists, friends, his own paranoia and the reader, eventaully stumbling on the secret purpose of Valis, the divine operator.
This is a classic rendering of the psychotic mind, the incredible truths it can uncover and the complete confusion and disorientation it suffers along the way.
If you like Dick read this book, it reveals him as fragile, vulnerable and fascinating.
And if you're interested in asking questions about anything, read this book - it won't answer any of them, but it sure as hell will put a different slant on the way you ask them.
I began with a selction of short-stories ('Imposter', 'The Exit Door Leads in', 'The little Black Box', 'We Can remember it for you wholesale'- all collected in 5 volumes)and this lead to novels such as the classic 'The Man in the High Castle'...and the realisation that William Gibson owed a little debt to Dick...
The previous re-issues, 'Now wait for last year' and 'A Scanner Darkly', were very much drugs novels- somehwhere between 'Naked Lunch' & 'Fear & Loathing'(with Dick's use of philosophy and his own brand of the future- which as the best SF- is here in the present)...Dick had a multitude of breakdowns- all detailed in excellent tomes on his work (the 'Pocket Classics' is a good intro to this)and this eventually lead to 'Valis'.
This is one of those postmodern texts that has the author as a character- something that has been done from Vonnegut to Martin Amis to Milan Kundera...It is the story of a vision and explores themes in all of Dick's work: we see the move from 'Do Androids...?' and 'The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch' to 'Now Wait...'and 'A Scanner Darkly' (of which portions of are re-worked)to this book.
The closest books to this are Burrough's 'Naked Lunch' and elements of Keroauc's 'Big Sur'- but really there is nothing else quite like it...WARNING- not to be read as an introduction; move from the short stories to earlier works like 'Martian Time Slip' to 'Ubik' to 'Now Wait...' to 'Scanner' (and everything else!!!). Ingest some Jean Baudrillard. Check the Philosophy section. And then read this maddening book about madness...one that you will have been glad to read...Now, can we have some more PK Dick reissues, notably 'Simulcara' & 'Palmer Eldritch'?
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