"Dick, Philip K - We Can Remember It For You Wholesale UC" - читать интересную книгу автора (Dick Phillip K)VERSION 0.5 DTD 032600
The science fiction writers of this world are resolutely differentfrom mankind and from each other-except that Philip K. Dick is more different. He goes his own way, writing his own kind of book, irrespective of changing moods and styles, true unto himself and his own inner vision. He produces steadily, but never badly, and won a well-deserved Hugo for his "Man in the High Castle." Here he is at his deep-probing best, keeping the reader on the run, exploring levels of consciousness and worryingbut worrying wellthe SF worrying-tooth of "what is reality?" WE CAN REMEMBER IT FOR YOU WHOLESALE Philip K. Dick He awokeand wanted Mars. The valleys, he thought. What would it be like to trudge among them? Great and greater yet: the dream grew as he became fully conscious, the dream and the yearning. He could almost feel the enveloping presence of the other world, which only Government agents and high officials had seen. A clerk like himself? Not likely. drowsily, with her usual hint of fierce crossness. "If you are, push the hot coffee button on the darn stove." "Okay," Douglas Quail said, and made his way barefoot from the bedroom of their conapt to the kitchen. There, having dutifully pressed the hot coffee button, he seated himself at the kitchen table, brought out a yellow, small tin of fine Dean Swift snuff. He inhaled briskly,, and the Beau Nash mixture stung his nose, burned the roof of his mouth. But still he inhaled; it woKe him up and allowed his dreams, his nocturnal desires and random wishes, to condense into a semblance of rationality. I will go, he said to himself. Before I die I'll see Mars. It was, of course, impossible, and he knew this even as he dreamed. But the daylight, the mundane noise of his wife now brushing her hair before the bedroom mirroreverything conspired to remind him of what he was. A miserable little salaried employee, he said to himself with bitterness. Kirsten reminded him of this at least once a day and he did not blame her; it was a wife's job to bring her husband down to Earth. Down to Earth, he thought, and laughed. The figure of speech in this was literally apt. "What are you sniggering about?" his wife asked as she swept into the kitchen, her long busy-pink robe wagging after her. "A dream, I bet. You're always full of them." |
|
|