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Author:
Philip K. Dick
Publication
Date: October
1962 (1st ed.)
Publisher:
Putnam (1st ed.)
239
pages
Buy
it on Amazon
Summary
The year is
1962. The United States are occupied by Japan and Nazi Germany,
and all Jews now live under assumed identities. But a mysterious
man writes a novel about a world where Japan and Germany lost the
war...
In
a Nutshell
The father of
the alternate history genre, this gem of a novel is a mind-boggling
book even today, and a showcase of Philip K. Dick's awesome and
twisted imagination.
Review
There's a saying
about genre fiction: a genre is one good book followed by a legion
of imitators. If that's true, then The Man in the High Castle
is the book of alternate history, followed
by imitators of lesser talent.
This is not
the most well-known Philip K. Dick novel, but it's one of the most
highly-regarded. When Dick came up with the concept of a USA conquered
by Japan and Germany during World War Two, it was one of his original,
outlandish concepts. This is the real thing, the father of the alternate
history genre since then augmented by some talented authors (Kim
Stanley Robinson's The Years of Rice and Salt) and some
less talented individuals (Harry Turtledove).
All that being
said, The Man in the High Castle is a typical K. Dick novel:
meaning, you'll love or hate this book as much as you love or hate
other works by Dick. It's filled with many common themes dear to
the author: confused identity, split personalities, deception, and
deep questions on the nature of Reality. One absolutely striking
example of this is Dick's concept that in a world where Nazis have
won the War, Jews still exist, but have gone deep underground. One
of Dick's characters is a favored member of the Nazi party, yet
is secretly a Jew who has received plastic surgery and altered his
history, all to corrupt the Nazi party from within.
Also fascinating
about this novel is how Dick avoids the obvious conclusions from
World War Two. The Nazis are depicted as madmen, yes, having carried
the Final Solution to Africa where they laid waste to the African
continent. However, the people inhabiting this world have lived
for 15 years with Nazis in power, and tend to take them as an unavoidable
though unpleasant fact of life. Likewise, the Japanese, although
occupying America, are depicted as anything but simple bad guys.
The most powerful
concept at the heart of The Man in the High Castle, however,
is the depiction of occupied America. Having been defeated 15 years
earlier, the US is no longer a powerful culture, but an inoffensive
yet quaint colony. Japanese businessmen collect artifacts of American
history like mere curiosities, obsessed with the past of a culture
on the verge of dying. This depiction, coupled with the placid acceptance
of it by American characters, is an unexpected yet truly effective
idea.
The story is
disjointed and tends to wander, and the ending has been termed weak
by many readers; but even with these faults, The Man in the
High Castle remains a mesmerising work from one of SF's most
important authors, and even today it dwarfs the other novels in
the genre it has birthed. Highly recommended.
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