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Old 06-06-2026, 01:15 AM   #32716
nana77
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I'm in the middle of "Deus Irae", by Philip K. Dick & Roger Zelazny; as explained on its introduction, and only mentioning it for its historical reasons, it's peculiar because:
a) Till there there hasn't been, on sci-fi, any who would have even touched christian topics on a novel (I mean it only as historical); there is a fun part where the editor mentions the fact that, always onto the sci-fi genre, several authors that claim to be atheists are then the ones that writes to talk about God.
b) The writers collaboration is yet something peculiar, thought most often is done by one of the two acting as to "back sbd"; in there the plot and the build of the idea is like 74% by Philip, although Roger doesn't acts as just a support, he gave it the finest touches, the crochets, the searches into foreign's languages poetry verses... The editor also mentions that a collaboration between two so big is rare, it's like on the '40s a novel would have been written by Heinlein and Van Vogt (or Hemingway-Joyce, or James-Mann).
The novel is fantastically well written.

Last edited by nana77; 06-06-2026 at 02:36 AM. Reason: typo
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Old 06-06-2026, 08:12 AM   #32717
Dr. Drib
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Originally Posted by nana77 View Post
I'm in the middle of "Deus Irae", by Philip K. Dick & Roger Zelazny; as explained on its introduction, and only mentioning it for its historical reasons, it's peculiar because:
a) Till there there hasn't been, on sci-fi, any who would have even touched christian topics on a novel (I mean it only as historical); there is a fun part where the editor mentions the fact that, always onto the sci-fi genre, several authors that claim to be atheists are then the ones that writes to talk about God.
b) The writers collaboration is yet something peculiar, thought most often is done by one of the two acting as to "back sbd"; in there the plot and the build of the idea is like 74% by Philip, although Roger doesn't acts as just a support, he gave it the finest touches, the crochets, the searches into foreign's languages poetry verses... The editor also mentions that a collaboration between two so big is rare, it's like on the '40s a novel would have been written by Heinlein and Van Vogt (or Hemingway-Joyce, or James-Mann).
The novel is fantastically well written.

If you enjoy Philip K. Dick, you might wish to check out Kobo.uk. They currently have The Man in the High Castle for £0.99 [USD $1.32]. It won the Hugo Award for Best Novel in 1963.
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Old 06-06-2026, 10:13 AM   #32718
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But before I get to that, I'm reading Death in the House by Anthony Berkeley. One from the 'golden age' of detective fiction. And its of its age, with all characters showing off their sexism and racism.
An instructive book to remind ourselves how much casual racism and sexism was accepted even in the mid 20th Century. The puzzle was poor.

Next I read Luck of the Wheels by Megan Lindholm. There's some resolution by the end, and not a bad place to stop the series. Most enjoyable.

Now I'm starting The Summer Tree by Guy Gavriel Kay. The Map I can forgive, but the massive list of characters is harder to overlook. That sort of thing should be relegated to an appendix at best. We'll see how it goes.
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Old 06-06-2026, 10:40 AM   #32719
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I've finished: A Star Danced by Gertrude Lawrence, the West End and Broadway star. It's a memoir of her ENSA tour just after D-Day and takes in her career up to that point. Mostly entertaining for all the names she drops and they are legion.
I'm getting A LOT of this in Louise Brooks' LuLu in Hollywood. I actually think she has a flair for memoir/personal reporting and I am quite sad that only seven of her pieces survived (and that no on wanted to publish her while she was alive).
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Old 06-06-2026, 01:14 PM   #32720
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If you enjoy Philip K. Dick, you might wish to check out Kobo.uk. They currently have The Man in the High Castle for £0.99 [USD $1.32]. It won the Hugo Award for Best Novel in 1963.
Thanks, I'm about to start to really buy those books in english, but not than one.
Thanks also because I wasn't to have checked and there are various of his novels (shorts and not) at 0.99, published in 2025.
I'll take "Blade Runner", which is @2.99$ (too if it's a later version, within the title changed; the content seems the same). I didn't read already the original.
On Kobo there is not "A Scanner Darkly", by him, on UK, in US instead is available; omg on Amazon its hardcover version is like @196.16$ or more, as used (from 1977).
"Deus Irae" also is @2,99$ on Kobo UK, but now I guess I'm off topic in this discussion.

Ah, I forgot to mention: the editor of the translated version of "Deus Irae" said that when they published it, they'd agree in advance that its price was quite high estimated, there was a run for the licenses in the various European Countries, by that time.

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