Newsday runs a piece we swear we've seen before, a variation on the "There's-a-Philip-K-Dick-movie-coming-so-let's-run-the-overlooked-genius-story-again" story ...
Dick published "A Scanner Darkly" in 1977. By that time, he'd emerged from semiobscurity, thanks to profiles in Rolling Stone and other mainstream periodicals, as a genre writer whose vision transcended the parameters of science fiction - or, at least, what most people perceive to be those parameters.
And perception is at the core of Dick's artistic vision; whether it's the perception of reality or of what it means to be a human being. It's possible to read four or five Dick novels in succession and come away with one's senses heightened, sharpened and opened to many possibilities - which, come to think of it, is what most good movies are supposed to do.
Comments