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A somewhat restrained novel from Dick in which he explores what the world might have been like had the Axis won the war alongside themes he is more usually associated such as the nature of reality.
The story presents fragmented narrative, following an array of disparate but interconnected characters who's actions affect events in not only each other's lives but on a global scale as well.
Germany and Japan are the world's superpowers that divide the world into spheres of influence with America part ...more
The story presents fragmented narrative, following an array of disparate but interconnected characters who's actions affect events in not only each other's lives but on a global scale as well.
Germany and Japan are the world's superpowers that divide the world into spheres of influence with America part ...more

Sep 05, 2013
Tamara
added it
Shelves:
author-male,
female-protagonist,
ww2,
male-protagonist,
north-america,
political,
sf,
usa,
historical,
alt-history
I was surprised by how sophisticated this was, in some ways. It feels much later than 1962. The way Dick constructs the different characters inner narratives, as products of their history and society, is the best bit. The struggles of culture, identity and self-esteem read as perfectly contemporary - or maybe our politics just haven't moved as much from 1962, actually.
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There's a saying about genre fiction: a genre is one good book followed by a legion of imitators. If that's true, then The Man in the High Castle is the book of alternate history, followed by imitators of lesser talent.
This is not the most well-known Philip K. Dick novel, but it's one of the most highly-regarded. When Dick came up with the concept of a USA conquered by Japan and Germany during World War Two, it was one of his original, outlandish concepts. This is the real thing, the father of t ...more
This is not the most well-known Philip K. Dick novel, but it's one of the most highly-regarded. When Dick came up with the concept of a USA conquered by Japan and Germany during World War Two, it was one of his original, outlandish concepts. This is the real thing, the father of t ...more

I grabbed MitHC because I've been watching the Amazon series, and it's been on my tbr for a while, as one of those essential classics.
There are great concepts in here, especially with regards to politics and cultural differences, but ultimately, I didn't enjoy it and I don't think I would have missed anything by not reading it.
Sure, there is (I think) some intentional call outs to racism, but the casual misogyny and racism, which I didn't feel was part of the intentional writing, but just a prod ...more
There are great concepts in here, especially with regards to politics and cultural differences, but ultimately, I didn't enjoy it and I don't think I would have missed anything by not reading it.
Sure, there is (I think) some intentional call outs to racism, but the casual misogyny and racism, which I didn't feel was part of the intentional writing, but just a prod ...more

I can't claim that this novel makes any sense. I only know what I experienced while reading it - that the world Dick created was utterly compelling, believable, and chilling, and that, much like Ubik, I closed the novel feeling like I'd been slapped in the face. One of his best, if not his very best.
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I know this is considered a classic, but eh. Just didn't really do it for me.
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Aug 31, 2008
Richard
rated it
really liked it
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
science-fiction,
pringle-top-100-1949-84

Oct 07, 2008
Carolyn
marked it as browse-to-read-someday


Apr 26, 2010
Kara Babcock
marked it as to-read


May 31, 2012
mark monday
marked it as on-the-shelf
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
z-philip-k-dick

Jul 28, 2012
Terry
marked it as to-read