Losing The Head Of Philip K Dick


Download Losing The Head Of Philip K Dick PDF/ePub or read online books in Mobi eBooks. Click Download or Read Online button to get Losing The Head Of Philip K Dick book now. This website allows unlimited access to, at the time of writing, more than 1.5 million titles, including hundreds of thousands of titles in various foreign languages.

Download

Losing the Head of Philip K. Dick


Losing the Head of Philip K. Dick

Author: David Dufty

language: en

Publisher: Simon and Schuster

Release Date: 2012-03-01


DOWNLOAD





Stranger than science fiction The incredible story of Philip K. Dick’s robotic resurrection – and the android’s utterly Dickian ‘escape’ “This compelling tale of androids, paranoid authors, and research into AI has… an ending that could have been written by Dick himself.” The Guardian “This story is touching, absorbing, and, ultimately, an exploration of what it means to be human.” The Spectator “An instant classic of weird science.” Alex Boese

How to Build an Android


How to Build an Android

Author: David F. Dufty

language: en

Publisher: Macmillan

Release Date: 2012-06-05


DOWNLOAD





The stranger-than-fiction story of the ingenious creation and loss of an artificially intelligent android of science-fiction writer Philip K. Dick. Readers get a fascinating inside look at the scientists and technology that made this amazing android possible.

The Exegesis of Philip K Dick


The Exegesis of Philip K Dick

Author: Philip K Dick

language: en

Publisher: Hachette UK

Release Date: 2012-04-19


DOWNLOAD





Based on thousands of pages of typed and handwritten notes, journal entries, letters, and story sketches, The Exegesis of Philip K. Dick is the magnificent and imaginative final work of an author who dedicated his life to questioning the nature of reality and perception, the malleability of space and time, and the relationship between the human and the divine. Edited and introduced by Pamela Jackson and Jonathan Lethem, this will be the definitive presentation of Dick's brilliant, and epic, final work. In The Exegesis, Dick documents his eight-year attempt to fathom what he called "2-3-74", a postmodern visionary experience of the entire universe "transformed into information". In entries that sometimes ran to hundreds of pages, Dick tried to write his way into the heart of a cosmic mystery that tested his powers of imagination and invention to the limit, adding to, revising, and discarding theory after theory, mixing in dreams and visionary experiences as they occurred, and pulling it all together in three late novels known as the VALIS trilogy. In this abridgment, Jackson and Lethem serve as guides, taking the reader through the Exegesis and establishing connections with moments in Dick's life and work.