What If Our World Is Their Heaven

The Final Conversations of Philip K. Dick

Fiction & Literature, Literary Theory & Criticism, Science Fiction, Biography & Memoir, Literary
Cover of the book What If Our World Is Their Heaven by Gwen Lee, Doris Elaine Sauter, ABRAMS (Ignition)
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Author: Gwen Lee, Doris Elaine Sauter ISBN: 9781468302288
Publisher: ABRAMS (Ignition) Publication: December 31, 2002
Imprint: The Overlook Press Language: English
Author: Gwen Lee, Doris Elaine Sauter
ISBN: 9781468302288
Publisher: ABRAMS (Ignition)
Publication: December 31, 2002
Imprint: The Overlook Press
Language: English

Interviews with the genius behind The Man in the High Castle and countless other science fiction classics.

In the field of science fiction, Philip K. Dick is unparalleled. His novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? became the classic film Blade Runner. His short story “The Minority Report” was adapted for the screen by Steven Spielberg. The Man in the High Castle has become a hit series on Amazon, and those titles represent only a small fraction of his work.

In November 1982, six months before the author’s untimely death, journalist Gwen Lee recorded the first of several in-depth discussions with Philip K. Dick that continued over the course of the next three months. This transcription is a fascinating read for anyone interested in the field of science fiction.

“These transcripts bring fresh insights—notably, into the imaginative biotech plot line of the unwritten The Owl in Daylight . . . Dick also discusses music, writing, philosophers and his 1974–1975 mystical visions, when the revelation of his son’s undiagnosed birth defect—‘down to anatomical details’—saved the child’s life . . . Fans will rejoice.” —Publishers Weekly

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Interviews with the genius behind The Man in the High Castle and countless other science fiction classics.

In the field of science fiction, Philip K. Dick is unparalleled. His novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? became the classic film Blade Runner. His short story “The Minority Report” was adapted for the screen by Steven Spielberg. The Man in the High Castle has become a hit series on Amazon, and those titles represent only a small fraction of his work.

In November 1982, six months before the author’s untimely death, journalist Gwen Lee recorded the first of several in-depth discussions with Philip K. Dick that continued over the course of the next three months. This transcription is a fascinating read for anyone interested in the field of science fiction.

“These transcripts bring fresh insights—notably, into the imaginative biotech plot line of the unwritten The Owl in Daylight . . . Dick also discusses music, writing, philosophers and his 1974–1975 mystical visions, when the revelation of his son’s undiagnosed birth defect—‘down to anatomical details’—saved the child’s life . . . Fans will rejoice.” —Publishers Weekly

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