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Philip K. Dick
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Ash
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Jun 08, 2025 02:10PM

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Pre-1962: largely regarded as his "pulp" phase, generally most of these works are not regarded as the same quality as his later work
The Man in the High Castle phrase, 1962-1970: This phase showa a marked change in his style, moving away from pulp and exploring more of what most people associate with PKD's works, such as alternative histories, examination of the nature of cognition and the experience of reality, bigger philosophical and psychological questiona
1970 and after: This is the period where PKD's works start to get very odd and challenging for many readers. His mental health issues and drug use worsen, he become obsessive in some ways, he experienced the famous "pink cross" hallucination/epiphany after having dental surgery. He wrote some of his most important, and more difficult (for readers), works during this time, but generally PKD fans will advise newer readers to start with the 1960s books before tackling these works (I personally started here with PKD so it's not a hard, fast rule).
From his 1960s works: Ubik, The Man in the High Castle, Martian Time-Slip and The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch are all good reads to follow Do Androids Dream...?
If you want to try some of his later works, I'd start with either A Scanner Darkly or VALIS.

Pre-1962: largely regarded as his "pulp" phase, generally most of these works are not regarded a..."
Omg, thank you so much! This will definitely help me in choosing books for future reading ^^!

Philip K. Dick: Four Novels of the 1960s

His short stories, on the other hand are stellar and much better than the movies would make them out to be!

I don't think "realistic/unrealistic " is a fair measure for his work as that wasn't the point of his motivation for writing. I often say he wasn't so much interesed in creating worlds for the reader as much as inviting the reader into his head to experience reality as he did. It makes his works intensely subjective compared to much of the works of his contemparies, so it does require some adjustment for many readers' expectations.

I'd like to find the time to read Ubik, even though the Virtual Book Club has already happened.

https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
and
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...

and it was also in the Bookshelf Rereads in May

both are kinda mindblowing in execution.
