David Gill reviews Philip K. Dick's new old novel

My friend David Gill, an emerging Philip K. Dick scholar, wrote this review of "Voices From The Street," the author's last unpublished novel:

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Philip K Dick is in the midst of a cultural ascendancy. The science fiction writer long-championed by devoted genre fans, freaks, and druggies is finally being recognized as a serious literary talent. This May, four of Dick's best science fiction novels from the 1960s will be released in a single volume by the Library of America. While Dick's SF is finally getting the critical attention it so deeply deserves, only serious Dick-heads know that the Bay Area author spent his lifetime hoping for literary success outside of science fiction. In the 1950s, Dick wrote one mainstream novel every year or so (all except the truly remarkable "Confessions of a Crap Artist" were thoroughly rejected by publishers during his lifetime). In January Dick's last unpublished novel, Voices From the Street, written in 1956, was released by Tor.

This mainstream novel, which chronicles the unfulfilling life of Oakland resident and radio electronics salesman Stuart Hadley as he searches for significance in the spiritually bankrupt wasteland of post-war, middle-class suburbia, once again reveals that Dick's literary success owes more to his considerable ability to depict realistic characters than to his use of space-age gadgetry.

Philip K. Dick said of his writing in 1978, "I don't write beautifully – I just write reports about our condition." Indeed, it is Dick's profound ability to chronicle the humanness of his characters (especially his androids) that pulls me into his books over and over again and this novel is no different. Stuart Hadley is immediately identifiable as a Dick character, wounded by the isolation and narcissism of society. In much of Dick's science fiction, reality breaks down because his characters want it to, because they feel so defeated in many cases that waking up in a world where nobody knows them at least gives them a reason to get out of bed. Hadley is no different; he has made a good life for himself: he's got a successful business, a beautiful wife, but he feels empty inside. Dick writes, "A dull, numbing tiredness crept through Hadley's bones. Lazily, the miasma drifted up like grey cigarette smoke, into all parts of his body."

In this novel, Dick masterfully portrays the paradox of the American dream: that the selfish drive for personal gain ultimately leaves people feeling isolated and unfulfilled. What Hadley learns over the course of the novel is that the peculiarly American tradition of desperately searching for meaning or significance (otherwise known as a mid-life crisis) is often undertaken out of a selfish desire for fulfillment and is therefore doomed to fail.

If this book is so good – which it is – why couldn't Dick get it published? Dick's simple, no-nonsense prose style is a bit understated for many serious readers' literary tastes but his simple narrative voice efficiently conveys his character's crushing existential angst. With common words and uncomplicated grammar Dick creates complicated worlds and deep characters who struggle in his fiction for meaning and significance. It may very well have been Dick's simple style that failed to grab mainstream editors' attention, but it is precisely this simple voice that Dick harnesses so brilliantly to capture a simple life in search of complication.

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