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The Man in the High Castle
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The Man in the High Castle, by Philip K. Dick
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Angela
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rated it 3 stars
Jan 31, 2016 12:12AM

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This is one of my options for the wildcard- an alternate history novel.
Maybe your thoughts on it will help me decide :)
Maybe your thoughts on it will help me decide :)




GR synopsis:
'It's America in 1962. Slavery is legal once again. The few Jews who still survive hide under assumed names. In San Francisco, the I Ching is as common as the Yellow Pages. All because some twenty years earlier the United States lost a war—and is now occupied by Nazi Germany and Japan. This harrowing, Hugo Award-winning novel is the work that established Philip K. Dick as an innovator in science fiction while breaking the barrier between science fiction and the serious novel of ideas. In it Dick offers a haunting vision of history as a nightmare from which it may just be possible to wake.
I am reading this for my 2016 Topic Discard Challenge, an alternate history book. I am starting this one tonight and am really looking forward to it. So far, I have really enjoyed Dick's writing style, and can't wait to see what this book has in store for me.

5/5

Check out Fatherland by Robert Harris. I loved this book, and it's along similar lines to The Man in the High Castle.


I just read a short-story from Rogues and I didn't really understand it either, so maybe my brain's dumb today (I've been a little sick).
The Man in the High Castle was a 3.5 stars to me, but I gave it 4 because it's very original.

Yeah, the ending is a bit weird. That seems to be Dick's style. A friend says it's because of all the LSD he was on during the time he was writing a majority of his books. Maybe it's true? I agree with you about the originality of it. The concept alone is so mind-blowing and really gets you thinking. What would life be like today had Germany won WWII? Yikes! I really don't think Dick was too far off, at least on the geographic divide.


I got interested in this after watching the first 4 or so episodes of the Amazon Prime series of the same name. They are based on the book, but quite a bit different as far as some of the story line goes.


That having been said, it was still an excellent book with a unique idea. It felt very real, despite not always being as straight-forward as I would have liked. It gave everything a weirdly horrific vibe.
It's weird, there was an awful lot I didn't love about this book, yet giving it anything below four stars out of five feels too low. So my initial rating for this one is - you guessed it - four stars out of five.





After watching the series on Amazon, I wanted to read the source material because I was so engrossed and captivated. And I definitely wanted to finish before I watched the 3rd season. The novel is more grim and gritty. The situation makes everything that much more dire. It also explains a lot in the series I just didn't understand. A lot of what happened during the war to get the alternative ending just kind of blew my mind. I'm still trying to digest it all. However, I am glad there's a series because I don't like books with unresolved issues or plots. PKD definitely could've written a sequel. It's not the point I get that, but I just like absolute resolutions.
Note: I can't read a book a week, but I want to finish all the prompts so I task my self with finding books that hits multiple topics. It actually makes it more challenging.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Man in the High Castle (other topics)Rogues (other topics)
Fatherland (other topics)
The Man in the High Castle (other topics)
The Man in the High Castle (other topics)