The Man in the High Castle

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This a previously-published edition of ISBN13: 9780141186672.

It's America in 1962. Slavery is legal once again. The few Jews who still survive hide under assumed names. In San Francisco, the I Ching is as common as the Yellow Pages. All because some twenty years earlier the United States lost a war—and is now occupied by Nazi Germany and Japan.

This harrowing, Hugo Award-winning novel is the work that established Philip K. Dick as an innovator in science fiction while breaking the barrier between science fiction and the serious novel of ideas. In it Dick offers a haunting vision of history as a nightmare from which it may just be possible to wake.

249 pages, Paperback

First published October 1,1962

This edition

Format
249 pages, Paperback
Published
September 6, 2001 by Penguin
ISBN
ASIN
Language
English
Characters More characters
  • Nobusuke Tagomi
  • Rudolf Wegener
  • Frank Frink
  • Juliana Frink

    Juliana Frink

    A judo instructor, living in Colorado. Though married to Robert Frink, the two are separated....

  • Robert Childan

    Robert Childan

    Robert Childan is the owner of American Artistic Handcrafts, an Americana antiques business on Montgomery Street in San Francisco. Catering to a mostly Japanese clientele, Childan has adopted their manners, anglicised modes of speech, and ways of thinking...

  • Paul Kasoura

About the author

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Philip K. Dick was born in Chicago in 1928 and lived most of his life in California. In 1952, he began writing professionally and proceeded to write numerous novels and short-story collections. He won the Hugo Award for the best novel in 1962 for The Man in the High Castle and the John W. Campbell Memorial Award for best novel of the year in 1974 for Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said. Philip K. Dick died on March 2, 1982, in Santa Ana, California, of heart failure following a stroke.

In addition to 44 published novels, Dick wrote approximately 121 short stories, most of which appeared in science fiction magazines during his lifetime. Although Dick spent most of his career as a writer in near-poverty, ten of his stories have been adapted into popular films since his death, including Blade Runner, Total Recall, A Scanner Darkly, Minority Report, Paycheck, Next, Screamers, and The Adjustment Bureau. In 2005, Time magazine named Ubik one of the one hundred greatest English-language novels published since 1923. In 2007, Dick became the first science fiction writer to be included in The Library of America series.

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