Best American Fantasy 2006

just finished reading the sizable tome, Best American Fantasy. no, it’s not a biography of my girlfriend. it’s a collection from 2006 edited by Matthew Cheney and Ann & Jeff Vandermeer. it’s most successful when addressing ‘fantasy’ as form instead of genre (y’all should leave dragons to Lucius Shepard, who dabbles in them occasionally though …

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Philip K. Dick ~ Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?

just finished re-reading Philip K. Dick’s classic basis for the film Blade Runner, Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? as usual, PKD takes the reins of a far more complex possibility set than can be sustained in even the best of Hollywood’s Sci-Fi pantheon. still, the droids don’t give up quite so laxly in the …

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Seb Doubinsky ~ The Song of Synth

just finished reading Seb Doubinsky‘s haunting novel The Song Of Synth, a tale of hackers, poets, revolutionaries, and multiple levels of deceit and duplicity, underpinned by SYNTH, a reality-enhancing drug (or is it an implied morality/conscience/consciousness?) Seb writes with a great balance of cinematic concision and romance that makes for compelling reading. highly recommended.

Philip K. Dick ~ The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch

just finished re-reading Philip K. Dick’s The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch. drug-induced alternate realities, intra-system life forms, divinity, profanity, a trip you don’t come back from, or an entity from which you can never recede. one of the best of PKD, beautifully illuminated by many passages of The Exegesis of PKD.

Lucius Shepard ~ Five Autobiographies and a Fiction

just finished reading Lucius Shepard‘s latest collection of stories, Five Autobiographies and a Fiction. it seems always to be the case that the latest of Lucius becomes one’s favourite; certainly the case here. all but one (Vacancy, a welcome inclusion in this handsome Subterranean Pressing) new, and each another flabbergasting original. there’s no one with …

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Philip K. Dick ~ The Man in the High Castle

just finished reading Philip K. Dick’s 1962 novel, The Man in the High Castle, part of the Library of America’s three-volume collection of the Major Arcana of his novels, curated by Jonathan Lethem, who also was largely responsible for The Exegesis of PKD. after traversing those 800+pages, it was inevitable to revisit PKD’s major work, …

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