His dry decency,\ satellite of the future.\ Invasion of man.#HAIKUPRAJNA - The Crack in Space
Big fan of Philip K. Dick's body of work and all of their adaptations--have yet to be disappointed--and "The Crack in Space" is yet another fine story; this was, according to Wikipedia, first released as "Cantata 140" (a reference to Bach) and follows a trend in many authors' works of continuing or citing one's own short stories (this case being "Prominent Author") with a larger novel.
" ‘In view of your dedication to fraud,’ the Sinanthropus said, ‘I see no real point in my remaining here; the longer I go on, the more immersed I become. Personally, I regret this whole encounter; my people have suffered by it already.'"
This is a story about the first African American President of the United States in the year 2080 and an accidental passage into another dimension. All the 1%ers are hibernating indefinitely due to overpopulation, leaving America's minorities as the majority, which fuels a new colonization effort that defines the presidential race where the primary solution appears as a Counter-Earth that is populated with another race of advanced beings.
" ‘You think life is worth living, Dar?’ Hadley demanded suddenly. ‘Who knows. And if you have to ask, there’s something wrong with you.' "
For sure for the die hard fans rather than someone just getting into PKD, as his tropes are all there but they outshine the political topics that drive the rest of plot; mutants, laser beams, hovercraft, a satellite-brothel housing innumerable women and illegal substances that evoke modern day struggles with addiction; they are there, but there are better stories by him that have these, as well.
"... The food’s actually prepared by humans.’‘Humans? As compared to what?’‘Automatic food-processing systems,’ Tito murmured. ‘Or don’t you ever eat in autoprep restaurants?’ After all, the Sands were wealthy; possibly they normally enjoyed human-prepared food. ‘Personally, I can’t stand autopreps. The food’s always so predictable. Never burned, never…’ He broke off…"
Philip K. Dick shares prophetic visions from 1960s Berkley, with liberal sentiments and philosophical concepts that were counterculture during the political landscape of his time, which are now considered common human decency, all conveyed through the lens of science fiction.
... Updated 220901 to correct the book's title from "... in Time" to "... in Space".
These Goodreads poems will be collected in a future edition of the HaikuPrajna Collection. More can be found on my Book Reviews page, including my Goodreads Years in Review (add me as a friend!): https://haikuprajna.blogspot.com/p/goodreads-book-reviews.html
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Thank you for reading.
Until next time,
Allen W. McLean
Thank you for reading.
Until next time,
Allen W. McLean
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