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The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch

The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch

daPhilip K Dick
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Da Italia

Luciano Mezzetta
4,0 su 5 stelle Drugs and what is real
Recensito in Italia 🇮🇹 il 12 gennaio 2021
Acquisto verificato
This is a very good novel by Dick. It is overly long however. A good third could have been eliminated without doing harm. I am not a SCI FI fan. Most SCI FI is formula plagued. Dick is different.
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Da altri Paesi

William Henry
4,0 su 5 stelle amazing creatively
Recensito nel Regno Unito 🇬🇧 il 7 maggio 2023
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Great concept and compelling story but marginally confused plot with too many metaphysical / religious ruminations to allow for a satisfying conclusion.
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DrPat
4,0 su 5 stelle God in a Fungus
Recensito negli Stati Uniti 🇺🇸 il 4 giugno 2016
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Dick is renowned for his strangely compelling stories, but this is certainly one of his strangest. Set in a future that takes elements of 1950s cocktail-party morals and "Minority Report"  Minority Report [Blu-ray ] precognition, mingled with a global-warming meltdown expected a scant 50 years in the future; Palmer Eldritch then takes a nose-dive into the 1960s’ to find salvation and damnation in an alien mushroom.

Barney Mayerson is a fashion pre-cog, working for Leo Bulero, the head of “Perky Pat Layouts.” Perky Pat and her “boyfriend” Walt are dolls whose materialistic lifestyle is supported by fashionable miniatures of cars, stereo systems, furniture, clothing, and everything desirable to the teeming millions who live on Earth.

The problem is, there are too many people on Earth to allow everyone to have this abundance for real, so random people are “drafted” to become colonists on Mars. There, they use the illegal drug Can-D to become, temporarily, Perky Pat or her boyfriend. The quality of this experience (the only escape available to the colonists) is believed to be dependent on the up-to-date fashion of the miniature layouts they create for their Pat and Walt dolls.

Belief is an important factor in this equation—in fact, religions have grown up around the drug experiences of the colonists. Some believe that the Can-D “translation,” the apparent entry of the women into Pat, and the men into Walt, actually takes them to an Earth before the time when it was suicide to be outside in the unshaded noontime sun, or to a less-than-eternal Heaven. Some liken the taking of Can-D to the wine and wafer of communion; the men commune together in the persona of Walt, the women in Pat. A few cynics believe neither, but welcome the easing of restrictions. After all, it’s Pat’s body that joins with Walt’s, so it can hardly be adultery, right?

The acquisitive, free-love society that has ruined Earth is thus miniaturized on Mars. The other requisite element in this scheme, the drug Can-D, is also manufactured by P-P Layouts (quietly, as contraband), and sold at top dollar to the colonists. Colonial authorities look the other way, because without the drugs, colonies quickly descend into cabin fever, then flash over into murder and mayhem.

As the story begins, Palmer Eldritch, legendary explorer to Proxima Centauri, has returned to the Solar System, bringing with him a new drug, an alien fungus marketed as “Chew-Z.” Unlike Can-D, Chew-Z needs no layout. And its translation brings the user into a world that seems really eternal, Heavenly—complete with an audience with God. The only problem is, sooner or later God, and all the other characters everyone encounters in the Chew-Z universe, take on a distinct resemblance to Palmer Eldritch.

When Barney Mayerson is drafted to Mars, he plans to take the new drug along with a toxin supplied by P-P Layouts, then sue Eldritch to convince the authorities that this new drug is worse than Can-D. As a pre-cog, though, he knows that his boss, Leo, will be charged with killing Palmer Eldritch in the near future. And neither Barney nor Leo realize that, once you’ve taken Chew-Z, Palmer Eldritch resides in your mind.

The tone of the story is psychedelic, with confusing chronology and a distorted sense of wonder and awe. Elements that seem to be important to the tale as it begins are abandoned, without apology, when something newer comes along. Earth’s ecological disaster is implied, but never explored; the aliens of Proxima are discussed once, then dropped. Can-D religions are sketched in the barest terms sufficient to contrast them with the Chew-Z experience.

In the end, "The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch" feels something like a drug trip; one is left with the sense of having had a revelation, but its details are lost in the haze.

This is one Dick novel that will never be made into a movie. I hope.
23 persone l'hanno trovato utile
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Matt Jenkins
5,0 su 5 stelle One of Philip K Dick's Best
Recensito nel Regno Unito 🇬🇧 il 9 marzo 2011
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"In the overcrowded world and cramped space colonies of the late 21st century, tedium can be endured through the use of the drug Can-D, which enables the user to inhabit a shared illusory world. When industrialist Palmer Eldritch returns from an interstellar trip, he brings with him a new drug, Chew-Z, which is far more potent than Can-D, but threatens to plunge the world into a permanent state of drugged illusion controlled by the mysterious Eldritch."
-- from the back cover

Written in 1964 and published the following year, The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch (Philip K Dick's sixteenth published novel), deals with a number of the themes that dominate his work (pre-cognition, the nature of reality, drugs etc..). As with all PKD's works this novel is packed with ideas that make you marvel at his imagination but also (if you are of a philosophical turn of mind) bring you to question and consider the themes he raises for yourself. PKD also creates characters that I at least find believable. As Ursula Le Guin has said "There are no heroes in Dick's books, but there are heroics. One is reminded of Dickens: what counts is the honesty, constancy, kindness and patience of ordinary people." PKD's characters always strike me as in some way authentic.

The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch was nominated for the Nebula Award for Best Novel in 1965.

"I am afraid of that book [The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch]; it deals with absolute evil, and I wrote it during a great crisis in my religious beliefs. I decided to write a novel dealing with absolute evil as personified in the form of a "human." When the galleys came from Doubleday I couldn't correct them because I could not bear to read the text, and this is still true."
-- Philip K Dick

"The worlds through which Philip Dick's characters move are subject to cancellation or revision without notice. Reality is approximately as dependable as a politician's promise."
--Roger Zelazny in Philip Dick: Electric Shepherd (1975), Bruce Gillespie, ed.

If you are new to Philip K Dick's work I would also recommend the novels (which generally seem to be regarded as among his best):

Do Androids Dream Of Electric Sheep?: The novel which became 'Blade Runner' (S.F. Masterworks)
Ubik (S.F. Masterworks)
A Scanner Darkly (S.F. Masterworks)
The Man In The High Castle (S.F. Masterworks)
Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said (S.F. Masterworks)

That said, though some of PKD's works are better than others, to my mind they are all well worth reading. I would also recommend his short story collections:

Beyond Lies The Wub: Volume One Of The Collected Short Stories
Second Variety: Volume Two Of The Collected Short Stories
The Father-Thing: Volume Three Of The Collected Short Stories
Minority Report: Volume Four Of The Collected Short Stories
We Can Remember It For You Wholesale: Volume Five of The Collected Short Stories
24 persone l'hanno trovato utile
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MC
5,0 su 5 stelle Read it to get the angle
Recensito negli Stati Uniti 🇺🇸 il 27 marzo 2023
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Looking at AI's future barreling down and the way people are going to ask it to think for them, it's a shock to look back and ask what 1960's proto-recognition vibes had PKD sensing so accurately the mood at the moment of emergence of a new, dominating, subjective reality. Only PKD could have thought of this.
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Damon Morley
4,0 su 5 stelle The Strangest Book I've Ever Read
Recensito negli Stati Uniti 🇺🇸 il 16 gennaio 2022
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I've read a few books in my day, and this is probably the strangest I've ever read. It's also the first PKD I've read, and from what I've read about him, "The Three Stigmata..." (TTSofPE) is strange even by his standards. In this case, I do not mean strange as a criticism--while TTSofPE is a trip, it never feels weird for the sake of being weird. The weirdness is always in service of PKD's vision. And while the story is quite trippy, the language in which PKD paints that story is quite clear and free from pretension. The clean prose + surreal story make for a good combination. Toward the end the story, as it becomes more dreamlike, it becomes harder to follow, and I'm not sure I fully grasped the ultimate point PKD was making, but I enjoyed the ride regardless.
5 persone l'hanno trovato utile
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Archy
5,0 su 5 stelle Transubstantiation...
Recensito nel Regno Unito 🇬🇧 il 18 maggio 2015
Acquisto verificato
It gets five stars for sheer wildness, though it's perhaps not quite up there with Ubik and Androids. The plot here is fairly simple: Palmer Eldritch is an industrialist who's returned from some distant star system with a mysterious lichen which, when chewed (it's called Chew-Z) transports the taker into an illusory world. Trouble is, Eldritch is able to enter and manipulate that world.

This gives Dick licence to be continually pulling the rug from beneath the reader's feet, and he rather over-indulges in this. Chew-Z is used by those forced to emigrate to Mars, where they scrape a living in 'hovels' (the Martian landscape is hopelessly unrealistic, but don't let that put you off!) whilst using the rather inferior Can-D, an illegal drug that needs a curious miniature layout to be effective. Parts of the novel come from the short story, The days of Perky Pat, Perky Pat being the doll used by the female Can-D users.

There are lots of nice, typically Dickian touches: people use portable psychiatrists to make them more, rather than less, stressed, so they can fail the draft and avoid being forced to go to Mars; there are the usual psi talents often found in Dick books of this period. But humour is pretty thin on the ground - this is, after all, as Dick himself noted, a study of evil. He compares the use of Can-D to the blood-and-wafer religious ceremony, and posits the question, what if this were true, but that the god concerned (Eldritch) were an evil one? A disturbing notion, and if the book isn't as downright scary as it thinks it is - and which Dick found it - it's still unsettling. For once a character has taken Chew-Z, has been delivered over to Eldritch, there's no certainty any more about what is real and what isn't.

Possibly not the Dick novel to read first, but definitely recommended.
3 persone l'hanno trovato utile
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SoylentGreen
4,0 su 5 stelle A fine and firm Dick, that didn't finish strong.
Recensito negli Stati Uniti 🇺🇸 il 14 febbraio 2012
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As with a number of Philip K Dick novels, we get hallucenogenic drugs, robots that can't shut up, women who seem to make the protagonist fearful or nervous due to their scheming, a little casual and random sex, beytral, oodles of Mars and time travel and alternating realities. Unlike UBIK or Martian Time Slip, this one starts off rather well paced and fairly easy to follow as things got more involved and alternate realities started kicking in. However, when Leo Bulero gets injected involuntarily with the new Chew-Z hallucenogenic replacement for Can-D, which can be taken without need for the interesting props, you are never sure you ever got back to reality again. You could say the same thing for Barney Mayerson, who takes the new Chew-Z and apparently comes 'round to gobble down another dose too soon....and gets wraped up in his own struggle with reality. For me, this reminds me a lot of the film Brazil, where the character Sam Lowry at some point loses touch with reality and starts living in an alternate reality....except in Brazil we get to see Harry sitting in a chair all bent out of shape in his own world at the end...whereas with TSPE, we aren't ever sure we ever left the alternate reality once Leo got his dose. I felt somewhat let down by the ending that left more vague inuendo as to what just happened than I would have expected. I'd have liked the ending a little less vague, and the last 1/4 of the book jumped around so much it was very hard to follow..and therefore I wouldn't consider a full five stars. I liked Martian Time Slip more, and UBIK about the same. I guess if you're really into schizophrenia and psycosis, you may get more out of this than I did.
3 persone l'hanno trovato utile
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Rhianna Knapp
5,0 su 5 stelle A Remarkable Feat
Recensito nel Regno Unito 🇬🇧 il 14 dicembre 2013
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This book is set in a future where Earth is too hot for the inhabitants and people are (rather dubiously) having to 'evolve' to be trendy and seen as important and score business contracts. Instead of people receiving psychiatric help to make themselves better, people instead receive it to make themselves 'unfit', so they don't have to go and live in 'hovels' on Mars, where religion and hopelessness go hand in hand. Set against this backdrop, two drugs are competing and trying to win the most 'users' - these drugs are Can-D and Chew-Z. One drug is illegal and can be taken in a communal manner, with a 'layout' and 'minned' props for the fantasy, and the other drug appears to have UN sanction but works on an individual basis (with Eldritch able to inhabit the realm also)....

Sometimes an author tries so hard to be ambitious that the heart of the story sinks in the process, like a disastrous souffle that had all the right ingredients and went into the oven for the correct amount of time, but somehow came out soggy and collapsed despite the diligence. Happily, this book is not one of those books - it is rich and complex through and through and, for those that like that sort of thing, you could happily analyse it until the cows come home. Indeed, even when the book slips into a hearty chunk of character led exposition at the end, it is done in such a layered and textured way that despite certain key symbols being given to the reader (e.g. what constitutes the three stigmata), more questions are only opened up as a result.

A novel about sanity, despair and religion. A masterpiece.
4 persone l'hanno trovato utile
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Terence C. Burnham
4,0 su 5 stelle Real or Fantasy -- the best and worst of Dick
Recensito negli Stati Uniti 🇺🇸 il 25 dicembre 2002
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The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch combines what I like most and least about the works of Philip K. Dick.
Dick shows why he is among the best sci-fi writers ever. He makes us question what is real about the human experience. In the three stigmata, this is done by exploring the mind via the use of recreational drugs named Can-D and Chew-Z. As I understand the goal, it is to get at the core of how human experience is a mental phenomenon.
Beyond the brain as experience creating maching, the three stigmata is packed with interesting ideas including pre-cogs (as in the movie "minority report").
Two aspects of the book limited my enjoyment. The first is the slippery divide between reality and fantasy. I'd estimate that 50% of the book is spent in action sequences of unknown reality -- is it actually happening or is it in the mind? -- you don't know. I understand that this relates to the main point of the book, but I tired of the device.
The second quirk that limited my enjoyment relates to Dick's view of the sources of human happiness. In the three stigmata, human colonists on Mars and elsewhere are unhappy because they live in objectively difficult circumstances.
The idea that hard times makes for unhappy humans may seem logical, but all the data contradict this notion. In fact, humans appear to be extremely good at adjusting to any world in which we live. A seminal study of happiness found that people who win a lottery end up being about as happy as those who become crippled in car accidents. See the greed chapter in Mean Genes for a longer description.
All in all, the three stigmata of Palmer Eldritch is an excellent book, well worth the read.
4 persone l'hanno trovato utile
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