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Complete Works of Philip K. Dick

Complete Works of Philip K. Dick

Philip K. Dick stands as one of the most visionary and influential figures in 20th-century science fiction. The Complete Works of Philip K. Dick brings together the breadth of his astonishing literary output — a sprawling, mind-bending collection of novels, short stories, essays, and philosophical musings that chart the disintegration of reality and identity in a rapidly accelerating technological world. Dick's fiction is grounded in speculative premises but driven by deeply human questions: What is real? What defines consciousness? Can we trust our memories? Are we free, or programmed? These questions pulse through his most iconic works — from Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? (the basis for Blade Runner), a meditation on empathy and artificial life in a crumbling future, to Ubik, where time unravels and death becomes negotiable. In The Man in the High Castle, an alternate history where the Axis powers won World War II, Dick explores political totalitarianism and the subjective nature of truth. Across his entire body of work, the line between illusion and reality is never fixed, and the protagonists—ordinary men and women—are often caught in terrifying systems beyond their understanding or control. This collection includes all 44 of his published novels, including lesser-known masterpieces like Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said, A Scanner Darkly, and VALIS—his semi-autobiographical dive into mysticism, madness, and metaphysical revelation. Also featured are over 120 short stories that span genres, including cyber-noir thrillers, dystopian parables, and haunting glimpses of alien contact. Stories like "The Minority Report," "Second Variety," "We Can Remember It for You Wholesale," and "Adjustment Team" have not only become film adaptations but also cultural touchstones, influencing everything from Black Mirror to modern discussions on surveillance, memory, and AI. Beyond science fiction, Dick's work often veers into religious, philosophical, and existential terrain. The so-called "Exegesis," parts of which are included in this edition, provides insight into his own attempts to reconcile a visionary experience he had in 1974, which profoundly altered his perception of reality and infused his later works with Gnostic and theological undertones. Far from being merely predictive, Dick's work is prophetic in the truest sense. He did not simply imagine flying cars or androids; he foresaw a world of deepfakes, reality distortions, and the commodification of thought. His characters question their own minds, memories, and moral compasses — themes that feel increasingly urgent in our data-saturated age. The Complete Works of Philip K. Dick is more than just a science fiction library; it is a kaleidoscopic window into one of literature's most restless and radical minds. For fans, scholars, and curious readers alike, this collection is a gateway into a universe where nothing is certain — except that reality is always stranger than it seems.

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