The novel Philip K.
Dick is Dead, Alas (1983) exploits the idea of parallel or alternate
universes. This is an idea more
acceptable to physicists of the current day than it was in 1983, when Michael
Bishop published this novel. In the
novel, something goes awry in the “space-time continuum” (for a lack of a word
that would better describe what happens in the novel) year 1968, something
connected to the Tet Offensive and the election of Richard Nixon. Nixon institutes restrictive and racist
programs. He’s elected to a third and
fourth term. Dissenters disappear.
African Americans are returned to Africa. Travel and freedom of expression restrictions
make life difficult. The United States
becomes a totalitarian police state. And
it establishes a moon base. Obviously,
this version of United States history is different from our own history.
This novel performs the science fiction version of It’s a Wonderful Life—it contemplates
the what-if scenario of a United States considerably different from our
own. The novel is essentially comic,
riven with dramatic irony as it explores the reality of a Nixonian world and
invites us to compare that reality with our own.
In one section, six guinea pig-like creatures called Brezhnev
bunnies accompany the main character Cal and President Nixon to the moon.
Philip K. Dick plays a significant role in the novel, which
more or less begins on the day of his death.
He appears to Cal and to others in different forms, in his “resurrection
body.” He seeks counseling from Cal’s
wife Lia, a psychologist. He appears as
a horse. He inhabits the body of an
African American dwarf who falls, inexplicably, into trances during which he
travels in some sort of astral manner all over the world and to the moon. The so-called resurrected Dick is at the
center of a plan to fix what has gone wrong with the world. The absurdity of the novel is part of its
charm.
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