Friday, August 09, 2024

The Antikythera Conundrum


Jo Marchant: Decoding the Heavens (2008)
Jo Marchant. Decoding the Heavens: Solving the Mystery of the World's First Computer. 2008. Windmill Books. London: The Random House Group Limited, 2009.
The other day I ran across an interesting-looking book in one of the vintage shops I frequent. What's more, it appeared to have been signed by its author, presumably at some book festival or other, which added even further to its cachet.

Of course I'd heard of the Antikythera Mechanism. As I recall, it figured in an old episode of Arthur C. Clarke’s Mysterious World (1980), and since then it's been used as the principal plot point in the latest - hopefully last - Indiana Jones movie:


James Mangold, dir.: Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny (2023)


The conceit there was that it was an Ancient Greek time machine, built by Archimedes of Syracuse, which some Nazi was trying to use to go back and change the course of history so that the Germans would win the Second World War.

As is so often the case, the truth in this case is far more interesting than the fiction. Jo Marchant and her publishers seem to have found it difficult to settle on a subtitle adequate to the significance of this artefact: "Decoding the Heavens: A 2,000-Year-old Computer and the Century Long Search to Discover Its Secrets" was the first one they came up with. The paperback edition simplified this to "Solving the Mystery of the World's First Computer."



Is it a computer? Well, that depends on what you mean by the term. Certainly it's an extremely complex calculating machine used - it would appear - to collate and chart astronomical phenomena. So, while it's an analogue rather than a digital device, the concensus of opinion seems to be that "computer" is indeed an appropriate description for it.

Jo Marchant, an award-winning science writer who also has a PhD in Microbiology, has put together a fascinating read. She charts the story of this strange piece of machinery from its recovery in 1901 from an Ancient Greek shipwreck off the island of Antikythera, to its present day place of honour in the National Archaeological Museum, Athens.

Like her predecessor in this particular subgenre, Dava Sobel in Longitude (1995), Marchant assembles a varied cast of heroes and villains along the way. Among the heroes are:



  • Derek de Solla Price, who became interested in the mechanism in 1951, after it had been unearthed from the hiding place in which it was concealed during the Nazi occupation of Greece, and who made the first (approximate) reconstruction of it in the early 1970s.


  • Michael Wright, who, initially fascinated by Price's monograph Gears from the Greeks (1974), has worked on the mechanism ever since, creating a model in 2006 which is the most accurate so far, and which is now in the Athens museum.

So far so good. There's no doubt that both of these ingenious scholars deserve the warmest praise. Wright appears to have cooperated fully with Marchant's book, which earned him the following encomium in her acknowledgements:
I am greatly indebted to Michael Wright, a gentleman who fielded my never-ending questions with honesty and grace ...

Charles Sturridge, dir. Longitude (2000)


Wright is, in effect, Marchant's equivalent to Dava Sobel's John Harrison (1693-1776), the working-class hero whose pioneering work on marine chronometers made possible the accurate determining of longitude at sea.

Unfortunately there's something about the Antikythera mechanism which seems to bring out the worst in people. It's a little like that fatal golden apple of discord inscribed "to the fairest," which led to the shepherd Paris having to make a choice between three contending goddesses, thus causing (inadvertently) the Trojan War.

If one continues reading the acknowledgments to Marchant's book, this is the next paragraph after the one about Michael Wright.
Thanks to Tony Freeth and his colleagues ... who were charming company and of great help when I first researched the Antikythera mechanism. Once I started writing this book, they felt unable to speak to me any further about their work or to be involved in any way. I hope I have done justice to their roles.


This is an unfortunate admission. Dr Tony Freeth is a founding member of the Antikythera Mechanism Research Project and an Honorary Senior Research Associate at University College, London. Much of the more recent work on the mechanism has taken place under his auspices.

Nor did he agree that Marchant had "done justice" to his role in the reconstruction and study of this ancient orrery. As Wikipedia article on Marchant's book sums it up:
The author acknowledges ... that none of the principal researchers from the Antikythera Mechanism Research Project were involved "in any way" with the writing of the book. The project has published a commentary that sets out problems with the book's account of their work.
The entry continues: "The book's account of the collaboration between Michael Wright and Allan Bromley is disputed."


Allan G. Bromley (1948-2002)


This is another area of controversy in Marchant's book. Michael Wright collaborated with the late Australian academic Allan Bromley, an expert on Charles Babbage's calculating machines, in obtaining accurate X-ray pictures of the Antikythera mechanism in the Athens museum in the early 1990s. It's contended in Marchant's book that Allan Bromley unfairly monopolised these images, failing to grant access to Wright until shortly before Bromley's death from cancer in 2002.


Allan Bromley & Frank Percival: Antikythera Mechanism Replica


This is, to put it mildly, not how his widow sees it. As you'll see if you click on the following link, Anne Bromley objects strongly to the way in which her husband is portrayed in the book.


Jo Marchant (1948-2002)


As a result of all this controversy, Jo Marchant decided to publish her own response to these criticisms:
It seems that Decoding the Heavens is causing some controversy on the web. In recent weeks, some of the researchers working on the Antikythera mechanism, as well as Anne Bromley (second wife of the late Allan Bromley, another Antikythera researcher) have posted comments expressing concern about the way that certain parts of the book are presented.

As you'll know if you have read Decoding the Heavens, the Antikythera mechanism is an emotionally-charged area of research. All of the researchers involved have devoted years if not decades of their lives to solving its mysteries, and that has resulted in a fair amount of passion and rivalry. In fact without those driving forces they probably wouldn't have reached such impressive results ...
Yes, that certainly resembles the "Apple of Discord" theory I outlined above. "Emotionally charged" is probably an understatement, in fact: the "comments" compiled by members of the Antikythera Mechanism Research Project run to 12 A4 pages! She goes on:
But this also means that there are many disagreements between the various researchers regarding how different parts of the story unfolded, and where the credit for various different discoveries is due. I doubt that any single account could please everyone, but as a journalist I spoke at length to as many people as possible in order to reach my own careful and independent conclusions about what happened. In writing the book I've also tried to give a flavour of the various viewpoints, with different parts of the story seen through the eyes of different people, and it was important to me where possible to portray these scientists as human - reflecting their strengths and weaknesses rather than leaving them as bland, one-dimensional "heroes". I (and my publishers) stand by Decoding the Heavens as an honest and accurate account of the Antikythera story.
My own impression as a reader is that her main cast is largely sorted into heroes (Price and Wright) and - if not outright villains, less than scrupulous rivals (Bromley and Freeth).



But then, the same could be said of many successful pieces of scientific popularisation. Arthur Koestler's classic history of cosmology, The Sleepwalkers, for instance, makes no secret of his preference for Johannes Kepler over Galileo Galilei. The latter is portrayed as sly and intellectually dishonest, whereas Kepler's perplexities and contradictions are seen as signs of his immense and painful integrity.

It makes gripping reading, but could hardly be regarded as a definitive statement on the significance of the two in scientific history. The same (as I've mentioned above) is true of Dava Sobel's Longitude.
The majority of the researchers mentioned in the book are happy with the end result. But of course there are different perspectives and if you are interested in finding out about these then please do look at the comments from members of the Antikythera Mechanism Research Project. These researchers were very helpful and open when I first started reporting on the Antikythera mechanism, but I should note that after I told them in May 2007 that I planned to write a book, some members - Tony Freeth, Mike Edmunds, Yanis Bitsakis, Xenophon Moussas and John Seiradakis - declined to speak to me further ... They said that to do so would conflict with their own plans for Antikythera books and media projects.

Tony Freeth was named to me as the AMRP team's spokesperson on any matters regarding Decoding the Heavens. I offered him the opportunity to comment on the two chapters regarding the team's work before publication but he declined, and in the nine months since the book came out, none of the team has mentioned any concerns about its content to either me or the publisher. I am sorry to hear at this stage that they believe there are inaccuracies, and any factual errors they raise now will of course be corrected in future reprints.
Fair enough. Marchant then goes on to mention some points which seem to her debatable: whose team it actually was, for instance: Freeth's or Mike Edmunds' ("This is technically correct ... but none of the sources I spoke to were in any doubt that Freeth was the real driving force behind the project"). She concludes: "I think though that most of the comments they have posted come down to differences in interpretation."
Regarding Anne Bromley's comments about the way her late husband is portrayed ... it was not my intention to describe him in a negative way, and I am genuinely surprised by her reaction. The impression I got of Allan Bromley during my research was of a brilliant, lively, forceful, friendly person, who could be manipulative and competitive at times, especially when it came to knowledge and information, but who got things done and was capable of sweeping others along with his enthusiasm. I hope this is the way he comes across in the book, and multiple sources who were close to Bromley in both the UK and Australia have said that they found my account reasonable and fair.

It's good to see Decoding the Heavens provoking discussion though. Please do read the comments and make up your own minds.
That last sentence sounds like very sensible advice. Endless, after all, are the arguments of mages ...


Joachim Wtewael: The Judgment of Paris (1615)





Marcus Tullius Cicero (106-43 BCE)


In one of his philosophical dialogues, the Roman orator Cicero mentions two machines built by Archimedes which were brought back as booty by the Roman General Marcus Claudius Marcellus from the siege of Syracuse in 212 BCE. Unfortunately the Greek inventor himself was killed by a Roman legionary who'd been given orders to arrest him and bring him back to headquarters. So died one of the greatest minds of all time.
I had often heard this celestial globe or sphere mentioned on account of the great fame of Archimedes. Its appearance, however, did not seem to me particularly striking. ... But as soon as Gallus had begun to explain, by his sublime science, the composition of this machine, I felt that the Sicilian geometrician must have possessed a genius superior to any thing we usually conceive to belong to our nature. Gallus assured us, that the solid and compact globe, was a very ancient invention, and that the first model of it had been presented by Thales of Miletus. ... He added, that the figure of the sphere, which displayed the motions of the Sun and Moon, and the five planets, or wandering stars, could not be represented by the primitive solid globe. And that in this, the invention of Archimedes was admirable, because he had calculated how a single revolution should maintain unequal and diversified progressions in dissimilar motions. When Gallus moved this globe, it showed the relationship of the Moon with the Sun, and there were exactly the same number of turns on the bronze device as the number of days in the real globe of the sky. Thus it showed the same eclipse of the Sun as in the globe [of the sky], as well as showing the Moon entering the area of the Earth's shadow when the Sun is in line ...

Dominico Fetti: Archimedes (1620)


It should be emphasised that this, the device described by Cicero, is certainly not that: the Antikythera mechanism. However, his remarks do confirm that such devices were known in the Ancient world, and that any attempts by earlier commentators to explain away the more complex features of this "celestial globe" as misunderstandings on the Roman lawyer's part can be now be seen to be completely misguided.



The vital significance of the Antikythera mechanism is that, while undoubtedly a wonderful piece of craftsmanship, it was not unique. The elaborate instructions included on it imply that it was meant for a less-then-expert recipient - some rich collector, perhaps, who wanted it to show off to his friends.


Massimo Mogi Vicentini: The Antikythera Celestial Machine (2012)


The complexity of the gearing, and the tiny size of many of the components also argue for a long tradition of building such machines. In short, Ancient Greek philosophers and proto-scientists were not all theory and no practice. And many of the great advances in - for instance - the creation of mechanical clocks, previously attributed to the genius of Renaissance inventors, can now be seen to be far more probably based on the surviving work of ancient craftsmen of this type.


Dave Goodchild: Antikythera Mechanism Replica (2018)


We may never be able to reconstruct definitively the complexities of the Antikythera mechanism. It's too damaged from its two thousand years under the sea - not to mention rough handling at the time it was first found ... and neglect for a number of years after that. The amazing thing is how much of its working has been able to be recovered by the combined work of mechanically minded scientists such as Derek de Solla Price, Michael Wright, Allan Bromley, Tony Freeth, and their many collaborators.



It is not known where the device originated: certainly somewhere in the Eastern Mediterranean, possibly in Corinth. In 2008 the Antikythera Mechanism Research Project "identified the calendar on the Metonic Spiral as coming from Corinth, or one of its colonies in northwest Greece or Sicily." This led them to posit a possible connection with Syracuse, which was both "a colony of Corinth and the home of Archimedes."



However, more recent research has demonstrated that while this calendar is of the Corinthian type, it cannot be that of Syracuse. Other suggested points of origin for the device include Pergamon, home of the celebrated Library of Pergamum, second only in importance to the Library of Alexandria. However:
The ship carrying the device contained vases in the Rhodian style, leading to a hypothesis that it was constructed at an academy founded by Stoic philosopher Posidonius on that Greek island. Rhodes was a busy trading port and centre of astronomy and mechanical engineering, home to astronomer Hipparchus, who was active from about 140-120 BC. The mechanism uses Hipparchus' theory for the motion of the Moon, which suggests he may have designed or at least worked on it.
The device is estimated to have been built in the late second century BCE or the early first century BCE.



How ought one to conclude this strange tale of scholarly rivalry and eventual, triumphant discovery? The Ancient Greeks (and, to a lesser extent, Romans) clearly deserve far more credit for their brilliance than we, their arrogant descendants, gave them credit for. Whoever the genius was who originated this particular class of devices - Archimedes or Hipparchus both seem possible suspects - they were certainly not working in a vaccuum.

Let's face it, there's a huge amount we still don't know about Greek (and Babylonian) science - not to mention the great achievements of their inheritors, the Islamic scholars of Baghdad and Córdoba, between the eighth and thirteenth centuries, before the Mongol conquest in 1258. The Renaissance inherited far more than we ever guessed from these predecessors. If we have seen further - to paraphrase Newton - it is only by standing on the shoulders of these giants.

Jo Marchant may have jumped the gun slightly in assuming that the mysteries of the Antikythera mechanism had been more or less solved by 2008, the date of her book. It's a fairly venal error, though. Her book remains a rattling good read and - until a better account comes along - well worth the trouble of hunting out.


Jo Marchant: Decoding the Heavens (2008)





Monday, August 05, 2024

2,000,000+ Hits!


2,000,110 Pageviews (5/8/2024)


I wrote a post a little over five years ago about breaking the million hit barrier on this blog. I'm glad to see that the traffic must have more than doubled over this period, as it took me more than a dozen years to reach that original figure.



1,000,000 Pageviews (14/6/06-6/12/18)


As I said in that earlier post:
I find it rather amazing that this most self-indulgent of websites, dedicated to so many subjects which I suspect I'm quite unusual in finding fascinating - bibliography, ghosts, poetry, the 1001 Nights, poetry readings and book-launches - should have clocked up so many individual hits ...

Frequency of hits


Admittedly some of the more recent increase in traffic took place during the Covid lockdowns, when people were more prone to itinerant scrolling. However, if anything, the number of hits on my posts seems to have grown over the past few months, as you can see from the graph above.

Mind you, I do understand what a blunt instrument such counters can be. There's nothing qualitative about this data. A long read of a post will show up just the same as a momentary glance at a headline or an image.


Location of hits


They're not all from me, either. There's a little link you can click on to make sure that your own pageviews don't get counted in the total, otherwise it would all seem a bit incestuous.


Countries of origin


And as for the countries the hits are coming from, why so many from France, for instance? Why more from Russia (and Singapore) than from New Zealand? It's hard to reach clear conclusions about such matters, beyond noting the bare facts.

More to the point, though, I recently conducted a census of all the various websites I operate (you can find a complete list of them here, if you're curious). The nearest contender to this one, The Imaginary Museum, was my book collection site, A Gentle Madness, which has reached 439,131 pageviews. Most of the others were considerably less than that - though I was pleased to see that our Aotearoa New Zealand Poetry Sound Archive site has clocked up 319,446 hits.

In total, they came to approximately four and a half million pageviews, so I'd have to say that this long experiment on online writing / publishing must be seen as a success. I don't see how I could ever reached anything like that number of people by conventional means.

I know that blogs are now considered passé - but then the same fate seems to overtake each new social media platform in turn: even the giants of the internet, Instagram, X [the site formerly known as Twitter], Tik-tok et al. Enforced obsolescence pursues us all.

For my own part, though, I still like blogs. They're a great way to comment on the world around you - albeit usually to a very specialised sub-tribe of users. In my case this includes bookhounds and pop culture vultures generally.


Favourite Posts (5/8/24)




Pageviews (6/12/18)





Thursday, August 01, 2024

SF Luminaries: Philip K. Dick


Philip K. Dick: The Man Whose Teeth Were All Exactly Alike (1960 / 1984)


Shortly after his death in 1982, a new and unexpected aspect of Philip K. Dick's talent began to appear. And no, I don't mean the tendency of his novels and stories to provide the germ for successful feature films ...

Rather, it was the existence of a whole series of realist novels which he'd written alongside the Sci-fi ones, but been unable to publish during his lifetime. All except two, that is: Confessions of a Crap Artist (1975) and The Transmigration of Timothy Archer (1982).


Philip K. Dick: Confessions of a Crap Artist (1959 / 1975)


The first of these, Confessions of a Crap Artist – Jack Isidore (of Seville, Calif.): A Chronicle of Verified Scientific Fact, is certainly a solid piece of work. I guess the arresting title may be one of the reasons it finally saw print, 16 years after he wrote it, but by then it was too late for readers to consider him as anything but a pulp SF writer, rather than an aspiring mainstream novelist - a distinction which still held considerable weight at the time, some fifty years ago.


Ridley Scott, dir.: Blade Runner (1982)


The titanic success of Blade Runner - based loosely on Dick's 1968 novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? - shortly after the author's death, had the side-effect of making PKD himself into something of a star. Presumably it was this which emboldened his estate to dip a cautious toe in the water of this huge lacuna in his writing career.

The first of his hitherto unpublished "mainstream" novels to be issued posthumously was The Man Whose Teeth Were All Exactly Alike, pictured at the head of this post. It was written in 1960, towards the end of a period of writing mainly realist fiction. Here's a list of all of his experiments in this genre, ordered according to their eventual dates of publication:


Philip K. Dick: Gather Yourselves Together (1950 / 1994)

  1. Confessions of a Crap Artist (1975)
  2. The Transmigration of Timothy Archer (1982)
  3. The Man Whose Teeth Were All Exactly Alike (1984)
  4. In Milton Lumky Territory (1985)
  5. Puttering About in a Small Land (1985)
  6. Humpty Dumpty in Oakland (1986)
  7. Mary and the Giant (1987)
  8. The Broken Bubble (1988)
  9. Gather Yourselves Together (1994)
  10. Voices from the Street (2007)

Philip K. Dick: Voices from the Street (1952 / 2007)


And here they are again, listed - with my notes on each of them - in their actual order of composition:


Philip K. Dick: Mary and the Giant (1954 / 1987)

  1. Gather Yourselves Together (1950)
    This is Dick's very first novel (or the first to survive, at any rate). It's set in China, but the focus is actually on a very claustrophobic group of three people, two men and a woman, left behind at an industrial plant as the Communists move in to take possession of it. The focus is almost entirely on the complex histories and inter-relations of the three - in a manner somewhat reminiscent of Sartre's classic existentialist play Huis Clos [No Exit] (1944). It's a bit overblown in parts, but a very promising beginning.
  2. Voices from the Street (1952)
    It's no accident that it was only in 2007, 25 years after Dick's death, that an enterprising independent publisher took on this, his last substantive remaining unpublished work. Voices from the Street is certainly a hard pill to swallow. Its message of rebellion against society's soul-crushing norms is similar to that of John Updike's Rabbit, Run (1960), which would enjoy such astonishing success a decade later. Dick's antihero, Stuart Hadley, is no Rabbit Angstrom, however. His general belligerence and misogyny make him a very hard man to empathise with. In structure, though, one can see in it the germs of Dick's later mastery of microcosm and macrocosm: a central protagonist balanced against larger, more cosmic - though similarly personified - forces.
  3. Mary and the Giant (1954)
    The choice of a female protagonist, Mary Anne Reynolds, allows Dick to explore a lot of interesting aspects of American life in the 1950s from what was then quite an unusual angle. Her intense sense of frustration seems futile and self-destructive from the outside, but as we get to know her better, her brittle, abrupt demeanour seems more and more plausible. Shorter than his first two mainstream novels, this one is also better paced and more simply constructed.
  4. The Broken Bubble (1956)
    This one is a bit harder to characterise. It seems to be examining proto-Beat territory about the 'new generation' of youth and its clash with traditional values, but at the same time there's a paean of disgust at over-the-top commercialism and aggressive advertising. All in all, it's hard to see much of a focus in the flounderings of the four main characters. As usual, the two main female characters are a blonde, Rachael, and a brunette, Pam, prefiguring similar pairings in later PKD novels, such as Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?.
  5. Puttering About in a Small Land (1957)
    The protagonist, Roger Lindahl, is a bit of an anti-hero, restless, mendacious, and (occasionally) violent. I think we're meant to prefer him to his rather cold and controlling wife Virginia, but actually I find her the more compelling character. The landscapes of Los Angeles are portrayed with much aplomb. To say what's it all about - except, perhaps, the flounderings of a Hunk Finn-like figure in the post-war world, as he attempts to resist the compulsion to 'light out for the territories' once again - would be quite challenging. Liz Bonner, the neighbour with whom Roger has an affair, is probably the most sympathetic member of PKD's cast.
  6. In Milton Lumky Territory (1958)
    Another interesting portrait of a dysfunctional relationship. In this case the dominant partner is a passive-aggressive woman who used to be the elementary school teacher of the protagonist, Skip Stevens! What brings the book to life is the wild-card character Milt Lumky, whose oracular pronouncements seem to foreshadow a series of later visionary bosses and dei-ex-machina in future PKD books. It ends with Skip cowed and subservient, but there's a sense that this may be only a temporary conclusion to this particular battle of the sexes.
  7. Confessions of a Crap Artist – Jack Isidore (of Seville, Calif.): a Chronicle of Verified Scientific Fact (1959)
    This, the first of these non-SF novels to see in print in PKD's lifetime, is in many ways the most interesting of the lot. We have the usual unbalanced relationship between predatory woman and passive man, though in this case there's a violent husband to deal with as well. What brings it to life is the voice of the third narrator, Jack Isidore, whose crazy, semi-logical analyses of "scientific fact" throw a completely new light on the incidents at the heart of the story. His wild card ideas add that touch of humanity which lightens up Dick's work in the fantasy and SF genres - otherwise the book would risk being seen as a complete downer from beginning to end. The autobiographical nature of some of its contents is perhaps the most terrifying aspect of the book. Dick could analyse people and situations so well, yet he seemed unable to avoid acting out the same patterns again and again in his own life ...
  8. The Man Whose Teeth Were All Exactly Alike (1960)
    It's a skilfully written novel by anyone's standards. The plot is quite baroque, what with faked fossils, local evolutionary throwbacks with 'clunch' jaws, and a whole series of feuds. I guess what's most disconcerting about is the strong sense of misogyny pervading it. Of the two main female characters, one is an emasculating schemer, and the other a pathetic drunk. True, the male characters don't come out very well either, but one can see why publishers passed it over at the time it was written. It's not that its author lacked talent, or didn't know what he was talking about - it's just that it fell somewhere between the two stools of social comedy and dark satire. Definitely worth reading, though.
  9. Humpty Dumpty in Oakland (1960)
    You can see the seeds of greatness in this one. PKD finally harnesses the Kafaesque intricacies of later masterpieces such as Ubik or The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch and unleashes them on a plot about a used-car salesman, a mechanic, and a record executive. As the blurb has it, there's "a weird menace running throughout," but also "moments of fragile decency." Nor does it end in complete despair, unlike most of his earlier experiments in realist fiction. Certainly it should have seen print at the time, but at least now it can take its proper place in his evolution as a great twentieth-century American novelist.
  10. The Transmigration of Timothy Archer (1981)
    This last one comes from a quite different place. It's a roman-à-clef about PKD's friend Bishop James Pike, who was tried for heresy by the Episcopalian church in the mid-1960s for espousing unpopular views on the nature of various Church dogmas. Dick's protagonist, Angel Archer, former daughter-in-law of Bishop Timothy Archer, is somewhat critical of his intellectual arrogance and self-serving ethical compass, but the human drama she unfolds - very close to the actual events of Pike's own life - gives Dick a chance to air his deepest moral and philosophical views. It was the last of his novels to be published in his lifetime.

Philip K. Dick: The Transmigration of Timothy Archer (1981 / 1982)


As you can see from this list, virtually all of these books were written between 1950 and 1960 - with the sole exception of The Transmigration of Timothy Archer.

Bishop James Pike, the original of 'Timothy Archer', published a book called The Other Side in 1968. It details a series of supernatural events which followed his son's suicide in 1966. This caused something of a scandal at the time. Pike died in mysterious circumstances in 1969, while hiking with his wife Diane in the Judean Desert outside Jerusalem.


James Pike: The Other Side (1968)


There was therefore a certain topical interest in the book, which made it a good risk for Dick's publishers, who marketed it as the last part of a theological trilogy, alongside VALIS and The Divine Invasion.


Philip K. Dick: The Man in the High Castle (1961 / 1962)


This was, however, quite a departure from the earlier mainstream books, which were in a far more socially conscious vein. Interestingly, he stopped writing them after the success of his alternate history novel The Man in the High Castle, which - one could argue, at least - combined many of the purely novelistic virtues of pace, setting, plot and characterisation developed over these years of steady application to the mechanics of his craft, with the expansiveness and visionary vitality which belong to his purely SF writing.


Philip K. Dick: The Broken Bubble (1956 / 1988)


Anyway, whatever the rights and wrongs of the matter - whether the shortsidedness of his agents and publishers cost us another mid-century John Updike or Philip Roth, or whether they ended up steering him in the direction of his true distinction - we have to acknowledge that that's how things panned out.


Philip K. Dick: Puttering About in a Small Land (1957 / 1985)


Personally, I tend towards the second of these opinions, but perhaps that's because I first encountered Phil Dick as an unexpected phoenix in a shelf of otherwise undistinguished SF paperbacks. And for me that will always be part of his magic: that sense of something extra hidden behind what Stanislaw Lem refers to as ‘the whole threadbare lot of telepaths, cosmic wars, parallel worlds, and time travel’ employed by earlier SF writers.


Philip K. Dick: In Milton Lumky Territory (1958 / 1985)


In any case, I'm glad that a succession of publishers have now dared to take on these unpublished novels of Dick's. Reading through them - for the first time - as a group, I'm struck, above all, by the immense talent on display within them. His characters are real characters: complex, empathetic people. His plots, too, are deeply considered and carefully framed.

There's a zany intensity to the best of his SF which doesn't occur here - and I should know: some years ago now I undertook the not inconsiderable task of reading through all of his 35 novels and 118 collected short stories in that genre in chronological order of composition. What these realist fictions do contain in spades, however, is that mysterious quality known as "wu", defined helpfully in The Man in the High Castle as the moment when:
The forces within [a] piece are stabilized. At rest. ... [T]his object has made its peace with the universe. It has separated from it and hence has managed to come to homeostasis.
You can read the whole passage in an earlier piece I wrote about Philip K. Dick. For the moment, though, I'll just say that whatever genre he was working in, Dick's work was always "alive in the now", like the piece of jewellery he analyses so painstakingly in this most calmly and beautifully written of all of his books.

Mind you, I'm more likely nowadays to reach for one of his more ramshackle later masterpieces: Ubik, say, or even the terrifying Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch. The thing about Philip K. Dick's fictional universe is that it was built on a large enough scale to contain all the multitudes anyone could desire.


Philip K. Dick: Humpty Dumpty in Oakland (1960 / 1986)





Philip K. Dick & friend

Philip Kindred Dick
(1928-1982)

Books I own are marked in bold:
    Novels:
    [date of composition / date of first publication]

  1. Gather Yourselves Together (1950 / 1994)
    • Gather Yourselves Together. Afterword by Dwight Brown. 1994. A Mariner Book: Boston & New York: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2012.
  2. Voices from the Street (1952 / 2007)
    • Voices from the Street. A Tor Book. New York: Tom Doherty Associates, LLC, 2007.
  3. Vulcan's Hammer (1953 / 1960)
    • Vulcan's Hammer. 1960 / John Brunner. The Skynappers. 1960. Ace Double Novel Books. New York: Ace Books, 1960.
    Listing Dick's novels in order of composition, rather than publication, makes it far easier to follow his growth (and eventual decline) as a writer. This, his first full-length SF novel - after a number of well-received short stories - seems crude only in comparison with what was to come. It's a well-structured story, on multiple levels, with the virtues of any fast-paced thriller.
  4. Dr. Futurity (1953 / 1960)
    • Dr. Futurity. 1960. Magnum Books. London: Methuen Paperbacks Ltd., 1979.
    • Docteur Futur. 1960. Trans. Florian Robinet & Dominique Defert. 1974. Librairie Générale Française. Ed. Gérard Klein. Paris: Le Livre de Poche, 1988.
    The immense complexity of the time travel plot, and the many-layered nature of the narrative show the Dick of the short stories beginning to inform the Dick of the novels. There's a slightly paranoid air to the doubled characters as they reenact deeds they imagine to be required by their previous journeys back and forward in time, but the characterisation is otherwise still rather rudimentary.
  5. The Cosmic Puppets (1953 / 1957)
    • The Cosmic Puppets. 1957 / Andrew North. Sargasso of Space. 1955. Ace Double Novel Books. New York: Ace Books, 1957.
    This is the first really impressive novel that Dick wrote. It's rather uneasily confined in the Ace double novel format, but its vision of a Manichaean universe, with Ormuzd and Ahriman at perpetual war over a small backwater town in Virginia is both breathtakingly original and completely daft. If it weren't for the fact that impostors, doubles, and a sense of subtle imposture informed every aspect of Dick's life, I'm not sure that it would work at all. As it is, it rings firghteningly true and absolutely impossible at the same time: a strong presage of things to come.
  6. Solar Lottery (1954 / 1955) [aka World of Chance (1965)]
    • Solar Lottery. New York: Ace Books, 1955.
    • Solar Lottery. 1955. Rev. ed. as 'World of Chance'. 1956. London: Arrow Books, 1979.
    This was Dick's first published novel, even though - as you can see - it's the sixth one he'd written since 1950. His interest in Messianic leaders with feet of clay is beginning to declare itself, as well as his ability to keep a number of diverse plotlines balanced against one another. His characterisation is still a bit weak, but given the (then) constraints on the pulp SF genre, it's remarkable how many interesting ideas he was able to include in so short a compass.
  7. Mary and the Giant (1954 / 1987)
    • Mary and the Giant. New York: Arbor House, 1987.
  8. The World Jones Made (1954 / 1956)
    • The World Jones Made. 1956. Panther Science Fiction. London: Panther, 1970.
    This novel was clearly influenced by Dick's musings on the career and lasting influence of Adolf Hitler - a subject he would return to somewhat more thoroughly a few years later in The Man in the High Castle. The interesting subplot of the artificially created Venusians makes the book much richer than it would otherwise be. It's perhaps his first SF novel to be thoroughly and unapologetically readable on its own terms, however.
  9. Eye in the Sky (1955 / 1957)
    • Eye in the Sky. 1957. London: Arrow Books, 1979.
    Definitely his most assured and powerful work up to this moment: on the one hand, it's a clever indictiment of McCarthyism; on the other hand, it shows the strange power of monocular visions of the world. It's also very funny in parts: all in all, an SF novel of permanent value.
  10. The Man Who Japed (1955 / 1956)
    • The Man Who Japed. 1956. Magnum Books. London: Methuen Paperbacks Ltd., 1978.
    The first real appearance of the 'dark-haired girl' who was to become such a feature of future novels by PKD. He paints a grim picture of a puritan future calling out for 'japing' by such as his hero, Allen Purcell - not really a major work, but assured and cleverly put together. The "enforced assimilation" [= cannibalism] motif is amusingly developed.
  11. A Time for George Stavros (1956 / ms. lost)
    Scott Meredith Literary Agency index card: "Long, rambling, glum novel about 65 yr old Greek immigrant who has a weakling son, a second son about whom he's indifferent, a wife who doesn't love him (she's being unfaithful to him). Nothing much happens. Guy, selling garage & retiring, tries to buy another garage in new development, has a couple of falls, dies at end. Point is murky but seems to be that world is disintegrating, Stavros supposed to be symbol of vigorous individuality now a lost commodity."
    Pilgrim on the Hill (1956 / ms. lost)
    Scott Meredith Literary Agency index card: "Another rambling, uneven totally murky novel. Man w/psychosis brought on by war thinks he's murdered his wife, flees. Meets 3 eccentrics: an impotent man who refuses to have sex w/his wife, the wife—a beautiful woman who's going to a quack dr. for treatment, an animalistic worker w/ambition but no talent. Man has affair w/wife, is kicked out by husband, tries to help slob. Finally collapses, is sent to hospital, recovers, returns home. BUT WHAT DOES IT ALL MEAN?"
  12. The Broken Bubble (1956 / 1988)
    • The Broken Bubble. 1988. Paladin. London: Grafton Books, 1991.
  13. Puttering About in a Small Land (1957 / 1985)
    • Puttering About in a Small Land. 1985. Paladin. London: Grafton Books, 1987.
  14. Time Out of Joint (1958 / 1959)
    • Time Out of Joint. 1959. Penguin Science Fiction. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1969.
    This is a fascinating externalisation of Dick's persistent feelings of paranoia. For the first time we see the virtues of his mainstream fiction: characterisation, atmosphere, believable dialogue - beginning to manifest themselves in his SF writing. A neglected masterpiece of its kind. The Penguin edition, which I own, manages to misspell the hero's name and get the dates wrong on the blurb: a sign of just how little they must have thought of him at the time ... If only they'd known!
  15. In Milton Lumky Territory (1958 / 1985)
    • In Milton Lumky Territory. 1985. Paladin. London: Grafton Books, 1987.
  16. Confessions of a Crap Artist (1959 / 1975)
    • Confessions of a Crap Artist – Jack Isidore (of Seville, Calif.): a Chronicle of Verified Scientific Fact. 1975. Magnum Books. London: Methuen Paperbacks Ltd., 1979.
  17. The Man Whose Teeth Were All Exactly Alike (1960 / 1984)
    • The Man Whose Teeth Were All Exactly Alike. 1984. Paladin. London: Grafton Books, 1986.
  18. Humpty Dumpty in Oakland (1960 / 1986)
    • Humpty Dumpty in Oakland. 1986. Paladin. London: Grafton Books, 1988.
  19. The Man in the High Castle (1961 / 1962)
    • The Man in the High Castle. 1962. Penguin Science Fiction. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1965.
    • The Man in the High Castle. 1962. Penguin Classic Science Fiction. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1997.
    • Included in: Four Novels of the 1960s. Ed. Jonathan Lethem. Library of America, 173. New York: Literary Classics of the United States, Inc., 2007.
    This book really is a quantum leap from all that preceded it in Dick's work. The plotting; the clipped, haiku-like prose style; the immensely plausible and impressively detailed historical background - they all come together to forge a strange, quirky masterpiece. Certainly it would have been impossible without all the 'mainstream' fiction he'd worked on for a decade before it was written, but it isn't really like those books anymore than it's like his earlier SF. It reads, literally, as if the I-Ching oracle had decided to write a novel.
  20. We Can Build You (1962 / 1972)
    • We Can Build You. 1972. Fontana Science Fiction. London: Fontana / Collins, 1977.
    One can understand the consternation Dick caused his agent by sending him this novel immediately after the successfully 'high-culture' Man in the High Castle. The comedy here is almost slapstick in its intensity, the prose-style as chaotic as his characters - gone are the precision and the gentle irony of its predecessor. And yet, in its own way, it's far more prophetic of Dick's future as a writer than High Castle. I suppose he may have thought that following up a book on WWII with a book touching on the American Civil War - 1961 was, after all, the centennial of that conflict - was a good idea. If so, he was out of luck. It wouldn't appear in print for another ten years.
  21. Martian Time-Slip (1962 / 1964)
    • Martian Time-Slip. 1964. Introduction by Brian W. Aldiss. 1976. London: New English Library, 1983.
    • Included in: Five Novels of the 1960s and 1970s. Ed. Jonathan Lethem. The Library of America, 183. New York: Literary Classics of the United States, Inc., 2008.
    This is undoubtedly one of PKD's major works. It's a bleak, depressing vision of the future on a Mars which has failed to transcend mankind's myriad conflicts. The native Bleekmen come out as the winners, but there's a terrifying insistence on the accuracy of a schizophrenic reading of the world as opposed to the destructive "rationality" of the amoral Arnie Kott. It is, in its own way, as brilliant as The Man in the High Castle, but with far less in it for our comfort.
  22. Dr. Bloodmoney, or How We Got Along After the Bomb (1963 / 1965)
    • Dr. Bloodmoney, or How We Got Along After the Bomb. 1965. London: Arrow Books, 1977.
    • Included in: Five Novels of the 1960s and 1970s. Ed. Jonathan Lethem. The Library of America, 183. New York: Literary Classics of the United States, Inc., 2008.
    The jokey title was presumably imposed on Dick as a nod to the film Dr Strangelove. It's not really applicable to the strengths (and peculiarities) of the book he actually wrote. It's actually an incredibly complex mélange of meditations on the nature of mid-twentieth-century civilisation, in the guise of a post-Apocalyptic Sci-fi narrative. One of his genuine masterpieces.
  23. The Game-Players of Titan (1963 / 1963)
    • The Game-Players of Titan. 1963. Sphere Science Fiction. London: Sphere Books, 1973.
    This, on the other hand, constitutes a return to the pulp conventions of his earlier fiction. It also repeats certain motifs from Solar Lottery, but with a greater grasp of their larger implications. His persistent sub-themes of complete mirror worlds staffed with impostors, oracular interactions with alien races (not to mention taxis and other pieces of machinery), and nagging existential self-doubt are all strongly in evidence.
  24. The Simulacra (1963 / 1964)
    • The Simulacra. 1964. Magnum Books. London: Methuen Paperbacks Ltd., 1983.
    An interesting but slightly confusing novel. The basic idea of a First Lady so charismatic that her husband, the actual US President, can be replaced by a series of manufactured robots over a period of decades, is as good as it is topical. Jackie Kennedy was, after all, at the height of her incandescent fame at the time it was written. So many other plot-strands get woven up in it, though, that it remains more of a magnificent ruin than a completely unified narrative. Well worth reading, though.
  25. The Crack in Space (1963 / 1966) [aka Cantata-140 (1966)]
    • The Crack in Space. 1966. Magnum Books. London: Methuen Paperbacks Ltd., 1980.
    A good, no-frills, slam-bang Sci-fi novel about a rift leading to a parallel earth inhabited solely by Peking Man. On one level, it's an astute satire on American politics, on another level, it's a fascinating set of reflections on racial prejudice and overpopulation.
  26. Now Wait for Last Year (1963 / 1966)
    • Now Wait for Last Year. 1966. A Macfadden Book. New York: Macfadden-Bartell Corporation, 1968.
    • Included in: Five Novels of the 1960s and 1970s. Ed. Jonathan Lethem. The Library of America, 183. New York: Literary Classics of the United States, Inc., 2008.
    The blurb of my paperback edition claims that it takes on "the chilling symbolism of the absolute nightmare." That sounds pretty accurate to me. It foreshadows certain aspects of both Ubik - time travel - and Palmer Eldritch - the irrevocable effect of a particular drug - but it has its own insane logic independent of either of them. Not one of his more comforting works, but not without its own moral centre, either.
  27. Clans of the Alphane Moon (1964 / 1964)
    • Clans of the Alphane Moon. 1964. Panther Books. London: Granada Publishing Ltd., 1984.
    A wonderfully witty translation of Dick's own experience of mental illness into a series of diverse tribes left behind on an abandoned moon originally occupied by a psychiatric hospital. Combine this with a bitter account of the madness of divorce proceedings, and you have one of his most elegant (and funny) parables: a certified - or certifiable - classic.
  28. The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch (1964 / 1965)
    • The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch. 1964. Frogmore, St Albans, Herts.: Triad / Panther, 1978.
    • Included in: Four Novels of the 1960s. Ed. Jonathan Lethem. Library of America, 173. New York: Literary Classics of the United States, Inc., 2007.
    One of Dick's two or three supreme masterpieces, along with The Man in the High Castle and Ubik. It's certainly a dark tale, with little room for hope or happiness in the dark universe presided over Palmer Eldritch. The zany inventiveness of the 'Perky Pat' layouts, together with the powerfully suggestive stigmata - steel arm, eyes, teeth - of the risen Eldritch together suggest a scarcely endurable vision of what lies in store for all of us. Dick said that it came to him in a vision, as he trudged one morning towards the distant pottery / writing shack to which his wife had exiled him.
  29. The Zap Gun (1964 / 1967)
    • The Zap Gun. 1967. Panther Science Fiction. Frogmore, St Albans, Herts.: Granada Publishing Limited, 1978.
    At this stage in his career, even the more routine PKD performances show a zany inventiveness difficult to parallel in anyone else's work. This tale of alien invasion, faked détente, West African comics artists, toymakers in parallel dimensions, and God knows what else, ends up making a kind of crazy sense: not to mention exhibiting a certain emotional depth.
  30. The Penultimate Truth (1964 / 1964)
    • The Penultimate Truth. 1964. Frogmore, St Albans, Herts.: Triad / Panther, 1978.
    There are so many ideas competing for our attention in this book that it feels, at times, just a little too packed for comfort. There's a time-travelling Native American doubling as an Eisenhower-like president-in-perpetuity; there's a set of two hoax documentaries about the Second World War which have persuaded the world's population that the whole thing was a set-up; and (finally) there's an imaginary war which is being protracted to keep most of the population out of sight in huge underground ants' nests. What it may lack in elegant simplicity, though, it makes up for in intriguing and original trains of thought. Well worth reading, despite its breathless pace.
  31. The Unteleported Man (1964 / 1966) [aka Lies, Inc. (1984)]
    • The Unteleported Man. With the Author’s Previously Unpublished Original Ending. 1966. Rev. ed. New York: Berkley Books, 1983.
    • Lies, Inc. 1966. Rev. ed. 1983. Gollancz SF. London: Victor Gollancz Limited, 1984.
    • Lies, Inc. 1966. Rev. eds. 1983 & 1984. Panther Books. London: Granada Publishing Limited, 1985.
    This is one of the oddest and most complex of all PKD's novels. It began as a 1964 novella about "a future in which a one-way teleportation technology enables 40 million people to emigrate to a colony named Whale's Mouth on an Earth-like planet, which advertisements show as a lush green utopia. When the owner of a failing spaceship travel firm tries to take the 18-year flight to the colony to bring back any unhappy colonists, powerful forces try to stop him from finding out the truth." When Ace books decided to reprint it in book-form, Dick wrote another 30,000 words of content to make it up to the length of a full novel. Ace didn't like the new, LSD-saturated second part about the multiple hallucinatory worlds on the other side of the teleporter, so they simply reprinted the existing novella. Many years later Berkley Books asked to see the original ending, with a view to publishing the novel in its entirety for the first time. Dick died before he could complete the further revisions he wished to do to the ms., though, so they were left with at least three page-long lacunae in the version they published in the USA in 1983. Before this text could be reprinted in the UK, though, Dick's executors located an almost complete typescript of the revised novel, now retitled Lies, Inc.. They duly published it, with the addition of two missing pages of material supplied by John Sladek. The most satisfying of these texts is probably the first, the original novella. The extra material written in 1966 greatly complicates the basic situation, and heralds some of the plot devices Dick would later use to greater advantage in such works as Ubik and A Scanner Darkly. The completely revised version, Lies, Inc., is even more difficult to follow, and seemingly self-contradictory in parts (Rachmael ben Applebaum is in a spaceship heading for Famalhaut at the end of one chapter, and waiting to teletransport there at the beginning of the next). These various loose ends can all be reconciled with each other if one accepts that the reality transformations which take place in the second part of the novel affect the established time-line of the first section, but it takes considerable effort on the reader's part. It is - to put it mildly - not an easy read in either of its 'complete' versions.
  32. Counter-Clock World (1965 / 1967)
    • Counter-Clock World. 1967. Grafton Books. London: Collins, 1990.
    There's possibly a bit too much going on in this novel for simple coherence. Dick's ongoing fascination with heretical Anglican Bishop James Pike is elided into the central figure of the 'Anarch Peak', who comes back from the dead with news from beyond as a result of the time reversal process which shapes the overall narrative. This also enables Dick to indulge his fascination with the ideas of medieval scholastics such as John Scotus Eriugena. The working out of the basic plot machinery threatens, at times, to dwarf the human drama at its centre, but it remains a valuable part of the Dick canon, and perhaps the best time reversal book ever written (far more ingenious than Martin Amis's preachy Time's Arrow).
  33. Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? (1966 / 1968)
    • Blade Runner (Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?). 1968. A Del Rey Book. New York: Ballantine Books, 1982.
    • Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? 1968. Introduction by Paul McAuley. Gollancz 50. London: Orion Publishing Group, 2011.
    • Included in: Four Novels of the 1960s. Ed. Jonathan Lethem. Library of America, 173. New York: Literary Classics of the United States, Inc., 2007.
    Forty years after the movie Blade Runner, it's finally possible to read Dick's novel again without worrying about plot divergences between the two. It's a wonderfully empathetic tale, which examines the 'android theme' from all angles. It avoids the simplistic narrative resolution of the film in favour of a far more nuanced and philosophically vibrant idea of the nature of empathy for all things living and unliving, embodied in the transcendental - albeit fraudulent - figure of the martyr Mercer. Definitely among his greatest achievements.
  34. Ubik (1966 / 1969)
    • Ubik. 1969. Panther Science Fiction. London: Granada Publishing Limited, 1984.
    • Included in: Four Novels of the 1960s. Ed. Jonathan Lethem. Library of America, 173. New York: Literary Classics of the United States, Inc., 2007.
    This is certainly one of the greatest - if not the greatest - of all Dick's novels. Are most of the main characters dead (or, rather, caught in half-life)? It would appear so, yes. But in that case, what exactly is the substance in the Ubik spray-can meant to represent? Just when the plot threatens to resolve itself into a more-or-less satisfactory paradigm, we get an unsettling intimation - at the very end - of another level of reality above the life / death barrier, as the first "Joe Chip" currency appears in Glen Runciter's pocket. It's the perfect illustration of Stanislaw Lem's point that Dick's writing could no longer be regarded simply as SF at this point, despite all its obvious surface resemblances to that genre: rather, it's philosophical writing of the highest order.
  35. Galactic Pot-Healer (1968 / 1969)
    • Galactic Pot-Healer. 1969. Grafton Books. London: Collins, 1987.
    Dick does an expert job of portraying a soulless, nightmarish bureaucratic hellscape in the opening passages of the novel. Shifting locations to Plowman's Plaet hardly seems to resolve Joe Fernwright's central dilemma, however. There are interesting rhymes with Dick's one published children's book, Nick and the Glimmung. Once again, an easy resolution confirming the eternal values of art and creativity at the end is resisted by Dick's statement that Joe's first original piece of pottery, prototype for all those he would ever create, was "awful." A teasing and ludic tale, rich in interesting side-characters and plot divagations.
  36. A Maze of Death (1968 / 1970)
    • A Maze of Death. 1970. Pan Science Fiction. London: Pan Books, 1973.
    • Included in: VALIS and Later Novels. Ed. Jonathan Lethem. The Library of America, 193. New York: Literary Classics of the United States, Inc., 2009.
    Theology was clearly becoming more and more important to Dick at this point in his career. The world he creates here is (on the one hand) a projection of the combined minds of the crew of a doomed spaceship; on the other hand, it's a blank slate where he can try out a new religion he's invented, with the Mentufacturer (God-the-Father?), the Intercessor (the Holy Spirit?), the Walker-on-earth (Christ?), and the Form Destroyer (Satan?). In plot terms, it resembles Agatha Christie's And Then There Were None, which also inspired the 2003 film Identity. A bleak but still rather compelling novel.
  37. Our Friends from Frolix 8 (1969 / 1970)
    • Our Friends from Frolix 8. 1970. Panther Science Fiction. London: Granada Publishing Limited, 1984.
    "The novel is set in the 22nd century, where humanity is ruled by mutated humans, "New Men" and "Unusuals", while normal "Old Men" are discriminated against. The story follows Nick Appleton, a low-class worker who falls in love with a subversive agent, while Thors Provoni has gone deep into space to find an ally to the resistance."
  38. Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said (1970 / 1974)
    • Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said. 1974. Newton Abbott: Readers Union, 1975.
    • Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said. 1974. Panther Science Fiction. Frogmore, St Albans, Herts.: Granada Publishing Limited, 1976.
    • Included in: Five Novels of the 1960s and 1970s. Ed. Jonathan Lethem. The Library of America, 183. New York: Literary Classics of the United States, Inc., 2008.
    "The novel is set in a futuristic dystopia where the United States has become a police state in the aftermath of a Second American Civil War. The story follows genetically enhanced pop singer and television star Jason Taverner who wakes up in a world where he has never existed."
  39. A Scanner Darkly (1973 / 1977)
    • A Scanner Darkly. A Del Rey Book. New York: Ballantine Books, 1977.
    • Included in: Five Novels of the 1960s and 1970s. Ed. Jonathan Lethem. The Library of America, 183. New York: Literary Classics of the United States, Inc., 2008.
    "The semi-autobiographical story is set in a dystopian Orange County, California, in the then-future of June 1994, and includes an extensive portrayal of drug culture and drug use (both recreational and abusive)."
  40. Radio Free Albemuth (1976 / 1985)
    • Radio Free Albemuth. 1985. A Grafton UK Paperback Original. 1987. London: Grafton Books, 1988.
    "Originally titled VALISystem A, it was his first attempt to deal in fiction with his experiences of early 1974. When his publishers at Bantam requested extensive rewrites he canned the project and reworked it into the VALIS trilogy."
  41. VALIS (1978 / 1981)
    • Valis. Corgi Books. London: Transworld Publishers Ltd., 1981.
    • Included in: VALIS and Later Novels. Ed. Jonathan Lethem. The Library of America, 193. New York: Literary Classics of the United States, Inc., 2009.
    "The title is an acronym for Vast Active Living Intelligence System, Dick's gnostic vision of God. Set in California during the 1970s, the book features heavy auto-biographical elements and draws inspiration from Dick's own investigations into his unexplained religious experiences over the previous decade."
  42. The Divine Invasion (1980 / 1981)
    • The Divine Invasion. 1981. Corgi Books. London: Transworld Publishers Ltd., 1982.
    • Included in: VALIS and Later Novels. Ed. Jonathan Lethem. The Library of America, 193. New York: Literary Classics of the United States, Inc., 2009.
    "It is the second book in the gnostic VALIS trilogy, and takes place in the indeterminate future, perhaps a century or more after VALIS. ... After the fall of Masada in AD 74, God, or "Yah", is exiled from Earth and forced to take refuge in the CY30-CY30B star system. Although people of Earth are meanwhile ruled by Belial, the fallen Morning Star who serves as Yah's principal Adversary, Yah is intent on reclaiming his creation."
  43. The Transmigration of Timothy Archer (1981 / 1982)
    • The Transmigration of Timothy Archer. London: Victor Gollancz Ltd., 1982.
    • The Transmigration of Timothy Archer. 1982. Panther Books. London: Granada Publishing Limited, 1983.
    • Included in: VALIS and Later Novels. Ed. Jonathan Lethem. The Library of America, 193. New York: Literary Classics of the United States, Inc., 2009.

  44. The Owl in Daylight (1982 / Unfinished)
    "The novel dealt with one Ed Firmley, a composer of scores for B-movie grade sci-fi films, and a race of alien humanoids that had evolved without the development of sound as a basis of communication. The shamans of this alien race would on occasion have visions of Earth and its many sounds. Due to their unique evolution without sound the holy men were incapable of describing these experiences to the rest of their race. They just knew that the place they saw was their heaven. Meanwhile their race was modeled around sight and light, encompassing much more of the electromagnetic spectrum than the limited human vision. In fact, from their perspective, humans were capable of sight but nearly blind, such as a mole appears to a human. Their language involved the telepathic projection of color patterns in precise gradations and following mathematical formulas."

    Collaborations:

  45. [with Roger Zelazny] Deus Irae (1964 / 1976)
    • [with Roger Zelazny] Deus lrae. 1976. Sphere Science Fiction. London: Sphere Books, 1982.
    If you set to one side the obvious resemblances to A Canticle for Leibowitz (1959) and Dick's own Dr. Bloodmoney (1963 / 1965), this would seem like a pretty original novel. Even as is, it remains a well-crafted and engrossing story, full of interesting conceits: the idea of the Servants of Wrath who worship Deus Irae, the God of wrath, embodied in Carleton Lufteufel, who set off the atmospheric bomb that devastated the world, is an especially good one. The pilgrimage frame-story is also vividly depicted. All in all, a very successful piece, if not an outright masterpiece.
  46. [with Ray Nelson] The Ganymede Takeover (1965 / 1967)
    • [with Ray Nelson] The Ganymede Takeover. 1967. London: Arrow Books, 1980.
    There are a lot of interesting ideas in this novel, but the execution seems unusually perfunctory. None of the characters are really properly developed, even though their interactions would seem to offer a lot of scope for development. Ray Nelson was a boyhood friend of PKD, and it's possible that their collaboration was intended to offer the former a bit of a leg-up as an SF writer. Certainly the explorations of altered consciousness in the novel seem to have Dick's signature stamped all over them.

  47. Children's Books:

    Nicholas and the Higs (1958 / ms. lost)
    Scott Meredith Literary Agency index card: "Very long, complex story, usual Dick genius for setting. Future society wherein trading stamps have replaced currency and people live hundreds of miles from work (drive at 190 mph), have set up living tracts. Cars often break down, so they have tract mechanic on full-time basis. Mechanic old, has bad liver, seems to be dying. People of tract use general fund to buy pseudo-organ but man is dead for a few days and "comes back" a bit touched. Sub plot concerns man from whom tract got organ (which is illegal), and how his presence causes moral breakdown of people in tract."
  48. Nick and the Glimmung (1966 / 1988)
    • Nick and the Glimmung. 1988. Illustrated by Phil Parks. 2009. Gollancz. London: Orion Publishing Group, 2015.
    This is a truly charming book. Reading it with a commercial eye, I think it's no mystery why it didn't achieve publication when it was first written, in 1966. It's just a little too dark and threatening, with numerous deaths and a strong sense of entropy pervading the whole. Nick himself is a very satisfactory protagonist, however: not too heroic, and not too cowardly. His love for his cat is inspiring - but then the cat himself is so accurately portrayed as to be also quite realistic. An excellent addition to the PKD canon.

  49. Collections:

  50. Four Novels of the 1960s. Ed. Jonathan Lethem. Library of America, 173 (2007)
    • Four Novels of the 1960s: The Man in the High Castle / The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch / Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? / Ubik. 1962, 1964, 1968, 1969. Ed. Jonathan Lethem. The Library of America, 173. New York: Literary Classics of the United States, Inc., 2007.
  51. Five Novels of the 1960s and 1970s. Ed. Jonathan Lethem. Library of America, 183 (2008)
    • Five Novels of the 1960s and 1970s: Martian Time Slip / Dr. Bloodmoney / Now Wait for Last Year / Flow My Tears the Policeman Said / A Scanner Darkly. 1964, 1965, 1966, 1974, 1977. Ed. Jonathan Lethem. The Library of America, 183. New York: Literary Classics of the United States, Inc., 2008.
  52. VALIS and Later Novels. Ed. Jonathan Lethem. Library of America, 193 (2009)
    • VALIS and Later Novels: A Maze of Death / VALIS / The Divine Invasion / The Transmigration of Timothy Archer. 1970, 1981, 1981, 1982. Ed. Jonathan Lethem. The Library of America, 193. New York: Literary Classics of the United States, Inc., 2009.



  53. Short Story Collections:

  54. A Handful of Darkness (1955) [Handful]
    1. Colony (1953)
    2. Impostor (1953)
    3. Expendable (1953)
    4. Planet for Transients (1953)
    5. Prominent Author (1954)
    6. The Builder (1953)
    7. The Impossible Planet (1953)
    8. The Indefatigable Frog (1953)
    9. The Turning Wheel (1954)
    10. Progeny (1954)
    11. Upon the Dull Earth (1954)
    12. The Cookie Lady (1953)
    13. Exhibit Piece (1954)
    • A Handful of Darkness. 1955. Panther Science Fiction. Frogmore, St Albans, Herts: Granada Publishing, 1980.
  55. The Variable Man And Other Stories (1957) [Variable]
    1. The Variable Man (1953)
    2. Second Variety (1953)
    3. The Minority Report (1956)
    4. Autofac (1955)
    5. A World of Talent (1954)
    • The Variable Man and Other Stories. 1957. New York: Ace Books, Inc., 1957.
  56. The Preserving Machine (1969) [Preserving]
    1. The Preserving Machine (1953)
    2. War Game (1959)
    3. Upon the Dull Earth (1954)
    4. Roog (1953)
    5. War Veteran (1955)
    6. Top Stand-By Job (1963)
    7. Beyond Lies the Wub (1952)
    8. We Can Remember It for You Wholesale (1966)
    9. Captive Market (1955)
    10. If There Were No Benny Cemoli (1963)
    11. Retreat Syndrome (1965)
    12. The Crawlers (1954)
    13. Oh, to Be a Blobel! (1964)
    14. Pay for the Printer (1956)
    • The Preserving Machine and Other Stories. 1969. Pan Science Fiction. London: Pan Books, 1972.
  57. The Book of Philip K. Dick (1973) [Book]
    1. Nanny (1955)
    2. The Turning Wheel (1954)
    3. The Defenders (1953)
    4. Adjustment Team (1954)
    5. Psi-Man (1955)
    6. The Commuter (1953)
    7. A Present for Pat (1954)
    8. Breakfast at Twilight (1954)
    9. Shell Game (1954)
    • The Turning Wheel and Other Stories [aka 'The Book of Philip K. Dick']. 1973. Coronet Books. London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1977.
  58. The Best of Philip K. Dick (1977) [Best]
      John Brunner: Introduction: The Reality of Philip K. Dick (1977)
    1. Beyond Lies the Wub (1952)
    2. Roog (1953)
    3. Second Variety (1953)
    4. Paycheck (1953)
    5. Impostor (1953)
    6. Colony (1953)
    7. Expendable (1953)
    8. The Days of Perky Pat (1963)
    9. Breakfast at Twilight (1954)
    10. Foster, You're Dead (1955)
    11. The Father-Thing (1954)
    12. Service Call (1955)
    13. Autofac (1955)
    14. Human Is (1955)
    15. If There Were No Benny Cemoli (1963)
    16. Oh, to Be a Blobel! (1964)
    17. Faith of Our Fathers (1967)
    18. The Electric Ant (1969)
    19. A Little Something for Us Tempunauts (1974)
    20. Philip K. Dick: Afterthoughts by the Author (1977)
    • The Best of Philip K. Dick. Ed. John Brunner. Classic Science Fiction. New York: Ballantine, 1977.
  59. The Golden Man (1980) [Golden]
      Mark Hurst: Foreword (1980)
      Philip K. Dick: Introduction: The Profession of Science Fiction (1980)
    1. The Golden Man (1954)
    2. Return Match (1967)
    3. The King of the Elves (1953)
    4. The Mold of Yancy (1955)
    5. Not by Its Cover (1968)
    6. The Little Black Box (1964)
    7. The Unreconstructed M (1957)
    8. The War with the Fnools (1964)
    9. The Last of the Masters (1954)
    10. Meddler (1954)
    11. A Game of Unchance (1964)
    12. Sales Pitch (1954)
    13. Precious Artifact (1964)
    14. Small Town (1954)
    15. The Pre-Persons (1974)
    16. Philip K. Dick: Story Notes (1980)
      Philip K. Dick: Afterword (1980)
    • The Golden Man. 1980. Magnum Books. London: Methuen Paperbacks Ltd., 1983.
  60. Robots, Androids, and Mechanical Oddities: The Science Fiction of Philip K. Dick. Ed. Patricia S. Warrick & Martin H. Greenberg (1984)
  61. I Hope I Shall Arrive Soon (1985) [Hope]
      Philip K. Dick: Introduction: How to Build a Universe That Doesn't Fall Apart Two Days Later (1985)
    1. The Short Happy Life of the Brown Oxford (1954)
    2. Explorers We (1959)
    3. Holy Quarrel (1966)
    4. What'll We Do with Ragland Park? (1963)
    5. Strange Memories of Death (1984)
    6. The Alien Mind (1981)
    7. The Exit Door Leads In (1979)
    8. Chains of Air, Web of Aether (1980)
    9. Rautavaara's Case (1980)
    10. I Hope I Shall Arrive Soon [aka 'Frozen Journey'] (1980)
    • I Hope I Shall Arrive Soon. Ed. Mark Hurst & Paul Williams. 1985. Grafton Books. London: Collins, 1988.
  62. The Collected Stories of Philip K. Dick (1987)
    1. Beyond Lies the Wub (1988) [CS1]
        Philip K. Dick: Preface (1982)
        Steven Owen Godersky: Foreword (1987)
        Roger Zelazny: Introduction (1987)
      1. Stability (1987)
      2. Roog (1953) [Preserving] [Best]
      3. The Little Movement (1952)
      4. Beyond Lies the Wub (1952) [Preserving] [Best]
      5. The Gun (1952)
      6. The Skull (1952)
      7. The Defenders (1953) [Book]
      8. Mr. Spaceship (1953)
      9. Piper in the Woods (1953)
      10. The Infinites (1953)
      11. The Preserving Machine (1953) [Preserving]
      12. Expendable (1953) [Handful] [Best]
      13. The Variable Man (1953) [Variable]
      14. The Indefatigable Frog (1953) [Handful]
      15. The Crystal Crypt (1954)
      16. The Short Happy Life of the Brown Oxford (1954) [Hope]
      17. The Builder (1953) [Handful]
      18. Meddler (1954) [Golden]
      19. Paycheck (1953) [Best]
      20. The Great C (1953)
      21. Out in the Garden (1953)
      22. The King of the Elves (1953) [Golden]
      23. Colony (1953) [Handful] [Best]
      24. Prize Ship (1954)
      25. Nanny (1955) [Book]
      26. Philip K. Dick: Notes
      • Beyond Lies the Wub. The Collected Stories of Philip K. Dick, 1. Introduction by Roger Zelazny. 1987. London: Grafton Books, 1990.
    2. Second Variety (1989) [CS2]
        Norman Spinrad: Introduction
      1. The Cookie Lady (1953) [Handful]
      2. Beyond the Door (1954)
      3. Second Variety (1953) [Variable] [Best]
      4. Jon's World (1954)
      5. The Cosmic Poachers (1953)
      6. Progeny (1954) [Handful]
      7. Some Kinds of Life (1953)
      8. Martians Come in Clouds (1953)
      9. The Commuter (1953) [Book]
      10. The World She Wanted (1953)
      11. A Surface Raid (1955)
      12. Project: Earth (1953)
      13. The Trouble with Bubbles (1953)
      14. Breakfast at Twilight (1954) [Book] [Best]
      15. A Present for Pat (1954) [Book]
      16. The Hood Maker (1955)
      17. Of Withered Apples (1954)
      18. Human Is (1955) [Best]
      19. Adjustment Team (1954) [Book]
      20. The Impossible Planet (1953) [Handful]
      21. Impostor (1953) [Handful] [Best]
      22. James P. Crow (1954)
      23. Planet for Transients (1953) [Handful]
      24. Small Town (1954) [Golden]
      25. Souvenir (1954)
      26. Survey Team (1954)
      27. Prominent Author (1954) [Handful]
      28. Philip K. Dick: Notes
      • Second Variety. The Collected Stories of Philip K. Dick, 2. Introduction by Norman Spinrad. 1987. London: Grafton Books, 1990.
    3. The Father-Thing (1989) [CS3]
        John Brunner: Introduction (1987)
      1. Fair Game (1959)
      2. The Hanging Stranger (1953)
      3. The Eyes Have It (1953)
      4. The Golden Man (1954) [Golden]
      5. The Turning Wheel (1954) [Handful] [Book]
      6. The Last of the Masters (1954) [Golden]
      7. The Father-Thing (1954) [Best]
      8. Strange Eden (1954)
      9. Tony and the Beetles (1953)
      10. Null-O (1958)
      11. To Serve the Master (1956)
      12. Exhibit Piece (1954) [Handful]
      13. The Crawlers (1954) [Preserving]
      14. Sales Pitch (1954) [Golden]
      15. Shell Game (1954) [Book]
      16. Upon the Dull Earth (1954) [Handful] [Preserving]
      17. Foster, You're Dead (1955) [Best]
      18. Pay for the Printer (1956) [Preserving]
      19. War Veteran (1955) [Preserving]
      20. The Chromium Fence (1955)
      21. Misadjustment (1957)
      22. A World of Talent (1954) [Variable]
      23. Psi-Man Heal My Child! [aka 'Psi-Man'] (1955) [Book]
      24. Philip K. Dick: Notes
      • The Father-Thing. The Collected Stories of Philip K. Dick, 3. Introduction by John Brunner. 1987. London: Grafton Books, 1991.
    4. The Days of Perky Pat (1990) [CS4]
        James Tiptree, Jr.: Introduction (1987)
      1. Autofac (1955) [Variable] [Best]
      2. Service Call (1955) [Best]
      3. Captive Market (1955) [Preserving]
      4. The Mold of Yancy (1955) [Golden]
      5. The Minority Report (1956) [Variable]
      6. Recall Mechanism (1959)
      7. The Unreconstructed M (1957) [Golden]
      8. Explorers We (1959) [Hope]
      9. War Game (1959) [Preserving]
      10. If There Were No Benny Cemoli (1963) [Preserving] [Best]
      11. Novelty Act (1964)
      12. Waterspider (1964)
      13. What the Dead Men Say (1964)
      14. Orpheus with Clay Feet (1964)
      15. The Days of Perky Pat (1963) [Best]
      16. Stand-By [aka 'Top Stand-By Job'] (1963) [Preserving]
      17. What'll We Do with Ragland Park? (1963) [Hope]
      18. Oh, to Be a Blobel! (1964) [Preserving] [Best]
      19. Philip K. Dick: Notes (1987)
      • The Days of Perky Pat. The Collected Stories of Philip K. Dick, 4. Introduction by James Tiptree, Jr. 1987. London: Grafton Books, 1991.
    5. The Little Black Box (1990) [CS5]
        Thomas M. Disch: Introduction
      1. The Little Black Box (1964) [Golden]
      2. The War with the Fnools (1969) [Golden]
      3. A Game of Unchance (1964) [Golden]
      4. Precious Artifact (1964) [Golden]
      5. Retreat Syndrome (1965) [Preserving]
      6. A Terran Odyssey (1987)
      7. Your Appointment Will Be Yesterday (1966)
      8. Holy Quarrel (1966) [Hope]
      9. We Can Remember It for You Wholesale (1966) [Preserving]
      10. Not by Its Cover (1968) [Golden]
      11. Return Match (1967) [Golden]
      12. Faith of Our Fathers (1967) [Best]
      13. The Story to End All Stories for Harlan Ellison's Anthology Dangerous Visions (1968)
      14. The Electric Ant (1969) [Best]
      15. Cadbury, the Beaver Who Lacked (1987)
      16. A Little Something for Us Tempunauts (1974) [Best]
      17. The Pre-Persons (1974) [Golden]
      18. The Eye of the Sibyl (1987)
      19. The Day Mr. Computer Fell Out of Its Tree (1987)
      20. The Exit Door Leads In (1979) [Hope]
      21. Chains of Air, Web of Aether (1980) [Hope]
      22. Strange Memories of Death (1984) [Hope]
      23. I Hope I Shall Arrive Soon [aka 'Frozen Journey'] (1980) [Hope]
      24. Rautavaara's Case (1980) [Hope]
      25. The Alien Mind (1981) [Hope]
      26. Philip K. Dick: Notes (1987)
      • We Can Remember It For You Wholesale [aka 'The Little Black Box']. The Collected Stories of Philip K. Dick, 5. Introduction by Thomas M. Disch. 1987. London: Grafton Books, 1991.
    It could easily be argued that his short stories are where Dick's talent shines out most irrefutably. True, many of them were later expanded into novels, but in their original, well-crafted form, they show his genius in its most unclouded light. A set of these five books should be in every SF-lovers library. Jonathan Cowie's useful comparison of their contents with that of the 2023 4-volume Gollancz Collected Stories can be found here at Fiction Reviews.
  63. The Philip K. Dick Reader (1997)
  64. Minority Report (2002)
  65. Selected Stories of Philip K. Dick (2002)
  66. Paycheck (2004)
  67. Vintage PKD (2006)
  68. The Early Work of Philip K. Dick, Volume One: The Variable Man & Other Stories (2009)
  69. The Early Work of Philip K. Dick, Volume Two: Breakfast at Twilight & Other Stories (2009)
  70. The Best of Philip K. Dick (2013)
  71. The Collected Stories of Philip K. Dick. 4 vols (2023)

  72. Short Stories:

      1952
    1. Beyond Lies the Wub [CS1]
    2. The Gun [CS1]
    3. The Little Movement [CS1]
    4. The Skull [CS1]
    5. 1953
    6. The Builder [CS1]
    7. Colony [CS1]
    8. The Commuter [CS2]
    9. The Cookie Lady [CS2]
    10. The Cosmic Poachers [CS2]
    11. The Defenders [CS1]
    12. Expendable [CS1]
    13. The Eyes Have It [CS3]
    14. The Great C [CS1]
    15. The Hanging Stranger [CS3]
    16. The Impossible Planet [CS2]
    17. Impostor [CS2]
    18. The Indefatigable Frog [CS1]
    19. The Infinites [CS1]
    20. The King of the Elves [CS1]
    21. Martians Come in Clouds [CS2]
    22. Mr. Spaceship [CS1]
    23. Out in the Garden [CS1]
    24. Paycheck [CS1]
    25. Piper in the Woods [CS1]
    26. Planet for Transients [CS2]
    27. The Preserving Machine [CS1]
    28. Project: Earth [CS2]
    29. Roog [CS1]
    30. Second Variety [CS2]
    31. Some Kinds of Life [CS2]
    32. Tony and the Beetles [CS3]
    33. The Trouble with Bubbles [CS2]
    34. The Variable Man [CS1]
    35. The World She Wanted [CS2]
    36. 1954
    37. Adjustment Team [CS2]
    38. Beyond the Door [CS2]
    39. Breakfast at Twilight [CS2]
    40. The Crawlers [CS3]
    41. The Crystal Crypt [CS1]
    42. Exhibit Piece [CS3]
    43. The Father-thing [CS3]
    44. The Golden Man [CS3]
    45. James P. Crow [CS2]
    46. Jon's World [CS2]
    47. The Last of the Masters [aka "Protection Agency"] [CS3]
    48. Meddler [CS1]
    49. Of Withered Apples [CS2]
    50. A Present for Pat [CS2]
    51. Prize Ship [CS1]
    52. Progeny [CS2]
    53. Prominent Author [CS2]
    54. Sales Pitch [CS3]
    55. Shell Game [CS3]
    56. The Short Happy Life of the Brown Oxford [CS1]
    57. Small Town [CS2]
    58. Souvenir [CS2]
    59. Strange Eden [CS3]
    60. Survey Team [CS2]
    61. Time Pawn [expanded into Dr Futurity (1960)]
    62. The Turning Wheel [CS3]
    63. Upon the Dull Earth [CS3]
    64. A World of Talent [CS3]
    65. 1955
    66. Autofac [CS4]
    67. Captive Market [CS4]
    68. The Chromium Fence [CS3]
    69. Foster, You're Dead! [CS3]
    70. The Hood Maker [CS2]
    71. Human Is [CS2]
    72. The Mold of Yancy [CS4]
    73. Nanny [CS1]
    74. Psi-man Heal My Child! [CS3]
    75. Service Call [CS4]
    76. A Surface Raid [CS2]
    77. War Veteran [CS3]
    78. 1956
    79. The Minority Report [CS4]
    80. Pay for the Printer [CS3]
    81. To Serve the Master [CS3]
    82. Vulcan's Hammer [expanded into Vulcan's Hammer (1960)]
    83. 1957
    84. Misadjustment [CS3]
    85. The Unreconstructed M [CS4]
    86. 1958
    87. Null-O [CS3]
    88. 1959
    89. Explorers We [CS4]
    90. Fair Game [CS3]
    91. Recall Mechanism [CS4]
    92. War Game [CS4]
    93. 1963
    94. The Days of Perky Pat [CS4]
    95. If There Were No Benny Cemoli [CS4]
    96. Stand-by [aka "Top Stand-by Job"] [CS4]
    97. What'll We Do with Ragland Park? [CS4]
    98. 1964
    99. Cantata 140 [expanded into The Crack in Space (1966)]
    100. A Game of Unchance [CS5]
    101. The Little Black Box [CS5]
    102. Novelty Act [CS4]
    103. Oh, to Be a Blobel! [CS4]
    104. Orpheus with Clay Feet [CS4]
    105. Precious Artifact [CS5]
    106. The Unteleported Man [expanded into The Unteleported Man (1966) / Lies, Inc. (1984)]
    107. Waterspider [CS4]
    108. What the Dead Men Say [CS4]
    109. 1965
    110. Retreat Syndrome [CS5]
    111. 1966
    112. Holy Quarrel [CS5]
    113. We Can Remember It for You Wholesale [CS5]
    114. Your Appointment Will Be Yesterday [CS5]
    115. 1967
    116. Faith of Our Fathers [CS5]
    117. Return Match [CS5]
    118. 1968
    119. Not by Its Cover [CS5]
    120. The Story to End All Stories for Harlan Ellison’s Dangerous Visions [CS5]
    121. 1969
    122. The Electric Ant [CS5]
    123. The War with the Fnools [CS5]
    124. 1974
    125. The Pre-persons [CS5]
    126. A Little Something for Us Tempunauts [CS5]
    127. 1979
    128. The Exit Door Leads In [CS5]
    129. 1980
    130. I Hope I Shall Arrive Soon [aka "Frozen Journey"] [CS5]
    131. Rautavaara's Case [CS5]
    132. Chains of Air, Web of Aether [CS5]
    133. 1981
    134. The Alien Mind [CS5]
    135. 1984
    136. Strange Memories of Death [CS5]
    137. 1987
    138. Cadbury, the Beaver Who Lacked [CS5]
    139. The Day Mr. Computer Fell Out of Its Tree [CS5]
    140. The Eye of the Sibyl [CS5]
    141. Stability [CS1]
    142. A Terran Odyssey [CS5]
    143. 1988
    144. Goodbye, Vincent [Included in The Dark Haired Girl (1988)]

    Non-fiction:

  73. The Dark Haired Girl (1988)
    • The Dark-Haired Girl. Ed. Paul Williams. Willimantic, CT: Mark V Ziesing, 1988.
  74. The Shifting Realities of Philip K. Dick, ed. Lawrence Sutin (1995)
    • The Shifting Realities of Philip K. Dick: Selected Literary and Philosophical Writings. New York: Vintage Books, 1995.
  75. The Exegesis of Philip K. Dick, ed. Jonathan Lethem and Pamela Jackson (2011)
    • The Exegesis of Philip K. Dick. Ed. Pamela Jackson & Jonathan Lethem. New York: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2011.

  76. Letters:

  77. The Selected Letters of Philip K. Dick, 1938–1971 (1996)
  78. The Selected Letters of Philip K. Dick, 1972–1973 (1993)
  79. The Selected Letters of Philip K. Dick, 1974 (1991)
  80. The Selected Letters of Philip K. Dick, 1975–1976 (1992)
  81. The Selected Letters of Philip K. Dick, 1977–1979 (1993)
  82. The Selected Letters of Philip K. Dick, 1980–1982 (2009)

  83. Secondary:

  84. Sutin, Lawrence. Divine Invasions: A Life of Philip K. Dick. 1986. A Paladin UK Paperback Original. London: Grafton Books, 1991.