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Another Dimension
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January 2018
Title: Philip K. Dick's Electric Dreams
Author: Philip K. Dick
Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
This
latest reprint volume of Philip K. Dick stories is a companion to the
new television anthology series of the same name, which adapts the
nine short stories and one novelette contained herein into ten
standalone episodes. In addition to the stories, the book contains
ten separate introductions, one per tale, written by the screenplay
writers who adapted that particular story. This ancillary material
will be of interest to viewers of the series wanting insight into the
screenplay writers’ thought processes and the differences
between the written stories and filmed episodes. The intros probably
hold little interest for general readers, though, as they are
generally short, repetitive, and don’t say things even casual
readers won’t have heard before (for example, “the
questions that drove him [PKD] concerned the very core of life
itself: What is human? What is real?”).
Ronald D. Moore’s introduction to the first story also dismayed
me a bit: “Very little remains of this story in the show, but
the heart, and perhaps more importantly, the brains behind the
episode originate in this tale.” At any rate, the value of the
book clearly rests on the stories themselves, and so it behooves us
to ask, how good is this selection?
The
copyright page provides two clues. These stories appeared between
1953 and 1955, right at the outset of Dick’s decades-long
career (his first professional story was published only one year
earlier, in 1952, and he didn’t publish his first novel until
1955). While a few authors may begin their careers writing classics
of the field (Robert Heinlein’s “—And He Built a
Crooked House”, for instance, was his third published story;
Ted Chiang’s “Tower of Babylon” was his first) most
take some time to perfect their craft. Dick didn’t publish
masterpieces from the get-go, but he was incredibly prolific, and by
1953 he was certainly producing solid short form work that can still
be enjoyed today (his 1953 story “Colony”, for instance,
holds up well). The second clue is the stories’ publication
venues. Some appeared in genre staple magazines such as Amazing
Stories, The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction and Galaxy,
but most of them were published in lesser ventures like If, Imagination,
Science Fiction Adventures, Future Science Fiction and Startling Stories.
What we have here, then, are entertaining yarns hitting on Dick’s
major themes, but steeped in many of the pulpy conventions of the
magazine markets of the day (“Sally swept breathlessly into the
living room, her breasts quivering with excitement”).
In
“Exhibit Piece” George Miller steps into a replica of the
past he has created as part of his job, only to find himself assuming
the role of one the replica’s inhabitants, memories of this
replicated life competing for plausibility with the memories of his
“real” life. Is he truly from the past, with his
futuristic life a fantasy, or is this past a psychotic delusion
created in order to try to escape his time? Dick presents a clever
third alternative, with a nice zinger of an ending that ironically
upends Miller’s earlier assertion, “There isn’t
anything I don’t know about the twentieth century.”
Intersecting times also feature in “The Commuter,” as a
man at a train station asks a ticket seller for a commute book to
Macon Heights, a destination the customer insists is real but which
the seller can’t locate on any map. Again the question arises,
is the prospective buyer delusional? Is Macon Heights symbolic of the
desire to retreat into the past or is it a real place? The plot
resolution here toys with the notion of the past not being fully
“jelled,” and having a kind of butterfly effect on the
present. “The Impossible Planet” brings this loosely
connected triplet of stories about the weight of history to a close.
A three-hundred-year-old woman’s insistence to be taken to the
mythical planet of Earth provides a poignant reflection on how the
reality of the past may be subverted by ignorance and the desire for
profit. (Some specifics of the “legend of lost Earth”
trope in this story anticipate later treatments by other authors,
such as the central quest in Isaac Asimov’s Foundation
and Earth).
In
“The Hanging Stranger,” Ed Loyce discovers a hanging body
on the street, and no one seems to mind. The tale doubles as a
wrenching parable on social norms—at one point someone attempts
to placate Loyce’s horror by saying it’s all “on
the level”—and as a paranoid Lovecraftian thriller
featuring “winged insects from another realm of being,”
creatures whose description is “pseudo-men. Imitation men.
Insects with ability to disguise themselves as men. Like other
insects familiar to Earth. Protective coloration. Mimicry”
surely foreshadows the film Mimic.
“The Father-Thing” and “Human Is” both deal
in Invasion of the Body Snatchers
scenarios, alternately depicting the vulnerability of the suburban
family unit and satirically relishing the advantages of having a
less-than-lovable partner taken over. “The Hood Maker”
combines political intrigue with the disturbing possibilities of a
world in which telepaths—“teeks”—have access
to everyone’s thoughts and can subject citizens to loyalty
scans at will. Babylon 5’s
Psi Corps anyone? “Sales Pitch,” “Foster You’re
Dead” and “Autofac” all explore various aspects of
consumerism culture and forced obsolescence with an impressive range
of cynicism, tenderness and surrealism.
If
you’re a newbie to Philip K. Dick and these stories have
whetted your appetite, I’d unhesitatingly recommend the
stand-alone collection Selected Stories
(2002; reprint 2013) as a follow-up. It replicates a few of these but
contains many other classics not here available. If you want to go
even deeper, the five-volume Collected Stories
from Citadel Press should satisfy. Philip K. Dick’s Electric Dreams
succeeds in showcasing the work of a master beginning to transcend
the creaky storytelling techniques of early 1950s popular magazines
and finding his own powerful voice along the way. I for one hope that
it does more than that and launches readers on their own journeys of
discovery.
Title: The End We Start From
Author: Megan Hunter
Publisher: Grove Press
Every
year the publishing tide brings in a swell of new dystopias and tales
of environmental collapse, and I typically read one or two to try and
take the temperature of these sub-genres. I haven’t read any
like Megan Hunter’s remarkably compelling and intimate debut
novel, The End We Start From.
The title is based on poetry by T. S. Eliot, from his Four Quartets,
quoted in the epigraph—if the title’s prepositional
ending bothers you, now you know who to blame—which perfectly
sets the tone for the hauntingly lyrical odyssey to follow. “I
am hours from giving birth,” begins the novel’s narrator,
“from the event I thought would never happen to me, and R has
gone up a mountain.” From the start we’re right there
with her, intrigued by the event she alludes to (who is R? why has he
gone up a mountain?) and by the head-on quality of her statements.
As
you’ll notice within the first few pages of Hunter’s
short novel, her narrative approach is highly stylized. The novel is
comprised of twelve numbered but untitled chapters, each of them
sub-divided into a dozen or more micro-scenes composed of anywhere
between one to five paragraphs, each in turn made up of between one
and four or so lines. The effect is immediate: a constant re-setting
of the scene, an incessant flickering or shuttering of our awareness
of the story in space and time. I’ll admit I waded into these
waters with some trepidation, nervous that the highly fragmentary
nature of the text would keep me at bay from the narrator’s
experiences and emotions, that the novel would become a repetitive
exercise in staccato cleverness blunting any possibility of rich
prose rhythms. I needn’t have worried. Hunter’s writing
is thoughtful and poetic, full of arresting imagery and imaginative
descriptive transitions that bridge the real with the metaphorical
(“This is the closest you can get to it: the void, the nothing,
the black lapping mouth of the sea and the black arching back of the
sky”). It’s incantatory and dense. As a result, you need
to slow down to appreciate the implications of each line, unpack
their significance. Subtle comments sometimes signal major plot
points, too, so even if you’re in it for the story more than
the aesthetic, it’s best not to rush.
And
what is the story? After many attempts, the narrator and her husband
R conceive. Thirty-two weeks into the protagonist’s pregnancy
authorities announce that the water-line is “rising father than
they thought. It is creeping faster. A calculation error. A badly
plotted movie, sensors out at sea.” By thirty-eight weeks the
couple discovers they will have to relocate from their home, as they
are within “the Gulp Zone.” So begins a harrowing
chronicle of childbirth, survival with relatives, in shelters,
separation, life on an island, and the many self-realizations brought
on by these events. This plot may be described as bare bones, which
is apt, since the protagonist’s voice and consciousness furnish
it with all the body it needs. Hunter’s impressionistic
approach works extremely well for the story she’s chosen to
tell, because it evokes the mindscape of someone dealing with loss
and trauma, incapable of sustained discursive thought or analysis.
The circumstances of a dissolving world force the narrator to be
nimble, adaptable, ever-ready to shift gears. Her experiences are
compressed, her thoughts often scattered. The novel’s imaginary
world is thus perfectly suited to its voice.
Other
forces are artfully balanced as well. As the narrator creates life
and contributes something of herself to the world, externally
manifesting the very life-force of the human species through the act
of procreation, nature destroys life and encroaches upon
civilization, testing humanity’s mettle and endurance.
Activities that once seemed important, like her job, are revealed to
have been illusory in their significance: “We thought we were
like a family. All the lunches we ate together. All the days of
sharing air, of letting ourselves out into the same place. Turns out,
there was nothing there.” As these outer structures crumble,
new structures of internal meaning related to her child, and her role
as a mother, arise. Some of my favorite moments are those of quiet
reflection: “Memories are starting to leak: the faint, perfumed
waft of the photocopier in my office. The cold room filled with
machines, the small window, like a cloister.”
Nicholas
Meyer once reflected that even if the Star Trek
bottle is always the same, very different wines may be poured into
it. I’m starting to think that near-future disaster stories and
dystopias might be like that, capable of taking on any flavor an
artist can conceive. Megan Hunter has here filled the environmental
disaster bottle with an intoxicating brew, and I can’t wait to
see what she concocts next.
Read more by Alvaro Zinos-Amaro