I’m unsure what to read next, so I’ve been combing through sections of The Nag Hammadi Library again. If nothing else it’s good for falling asleep. The fiction kick I’ve been on for awhile isn’t always good for that. — Noble Dust
Exactly this. I had committed to giving a review but I didn't finish the book and this was the reason along with what I perceived as a cliche form of discourse. I wanted to like the book as I like the idea and others I respect here liked it but I didn't. I am coming out of the closet now because I am not alone. Thanks.Ubik” is heavy on plot, as chaotic as it is, but weak on characterization. I didn’t really like any of the characters and didn’t much care what happened to them. That’s a real weakness for me — T Clark
I enjoyed reading the book. I haven’t read much Dick and I’m not a big fan. — T Clark
I haven't read that, but I've read pretty much all of Philip K. Dick's short stories. He's old school science fiction. — frank
If you've ever seen the Russian version of Solaris, it captures that old school vibe pretty well. — frank
His later novels are anything but old school Sci-Fi. — Noble Dust
By "old school" are you referring to the truly old school like Wells? — Noble Dust
Another great Lem novel is Memoirs Found in a Bathtub. — Noble Dust
I was thinking more about the 1960s I guess? Like Jack Vance, Robert Heinlein, Isaac Asimov, etc — frank
someone showing up to PKD's door with Christian fish necklace and it caused some epiphany in Dick? Was he struggling with mental health issues? — frank
The philosophical merit of the thread would go beyond the novel itself. — Noble Dust
It's been years since I read it though, and often can't convince myself to reread things just for class. — Srap Tasmaner
Interesting to read your thoughts. I still plan on making a thread, so I'll wait to respond. I need to read it again to respond to some of your points anyway. — Noble Dust
I wouldn't try to convince you guys that Ubik is a great novel. — Srap Tasmaner
I think this is true of a lot of science fiction from the 40s, 50s, and 60s. "The Foundation" and it's two successors had a big impact on me, but rereading the first recently enlightened me to how ham-handed the writing is. — T Clark
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