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Now Wait for Last Year von Philip K. Dick
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Now Wait for Last Year (Original 1966; 1993. Auflage)

von Philip K. Dick

MitgliederRezensionenBeliebtheitDurchschnittliche BewertungDiskussionen
1,6171910,934 (3.67)21
Earth is trapped in the crossfire of an unwinnable war between two alien civilizations. Its leader is perpetually on the verge of death. And on top of that, a new drug has just entered circulation -- a drug that haphazardly sends its users traveling through time. In an attempt to escape his doomed marriage, Dr. Eric Sweetscent becomes caught up in all of it. But he has questions: Is Earth on the right side of the war? Is he supposed to heal Earth's leader or keep him sick? And can he change the harrowing future that the drug has shown him?… (mehr)
Mitglied:lostcosmonaut
Titel:Now Wait for Last Year
Autoren:Philip K. Dick
Info:Vintage (1993), Paperback, 240 pages
Sammlungen:Electronic library (TO-READ)
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Werk-Informationen

Warte auf das letzte Jahr von Philip K. Dick (1966)

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Probably one of PKD's weakest novels. Some interesting ideas nonetheless. ( )
  zeh | Jun 3, 2023 |
2055: La Tierra está en guerra contra el enemigo alienígena. Gino Molinari, la Mole, secretario de las Naciones Unidas y lider de las fuerzas terrestres ante sus aliados lilistarianos y contra los insectoides reegs, es un hombre enfermo, que muere constantemente y es revivido cada vez para que pueda proseguir con el esfuerzo de la guerra. pero es también un hombre joven y vigoroso, que lanza enérgicos discursos por televisión. Y es también un cuerpo acribillado a balas de ametralladora, encerrado en un ataúd hermético lleno de helio líquido.
Y el doctor Eric Sweetscent, médico trasplorg, es quien debe cuidar de que siga con vida para que pueda proseguir su labor. Y es entonces cuando, por una argucia de sus falsos aliados y con la mediación de su amada/odiadaa esposa, se ve de pronto sometido a los efectos de la jj-180, una droga alucinógena creada como arma de guerra contra el enemigo reeg y que tiene la virtud de lanzar a quien la toma a través del tiempo y el terrible efecto de ser absolutamente aditiva y mortal desde la primera toma. Y Eric Sweetscent, muy a su pesar, se ve arrojado a su insensato peregrinar por el futuro y por los universos aalternativos...
  Natt90 | Mar 29, 2023 |
Like The Game-Players of Titan, this is set in a near future California where aliens have arrived and changed everyday life in significant ways. In this case, there are two sets of aliens -- the LiliStars who look just like us and the insectoid reeg. In a callout to Vietnam (the book was published in the mid 60's), the aliens are at war, and Earth has allied with the LiliStars, who are losing, and may be the bad guys. It wouldn't be Dick in the 60s without a hallucinogenic drug. No one did better than Dick at describing trips that cracked perceptions of reality and, in this case, time. And, as with The Game-Players, there's a highly dysfunctional marriage. There are some great encounters with Dick's surprisingly sympathetic talking cabs. There's even a trip to Mars, but it's the weakest part of the story, since we never see Mars, just a recreation of historical period of Earth. Like a chef, Dick was always experimenting with different ways to mix the same ingredients. The opening chapters looked like this would be one of his failed recipes, but things do settle down to an enjoyable action plot that eventually morphs into a nice discussion on personal responsibilities.

Highly recommended for Dick fans, but perhaps a bit advanced for those new to his fiction. ( )
2 abstimmen ChrisRiesbeck | Apr 5, 2022 |
Living in Different Times

Those old enough can recall the 1960s, specifically the mid 60s when the hallucinogenic LSD became the rage. The epicenter of the LSD era was in San Francisco, home to the Merry Pranksters and the first LSD lab, established by Owsley “Bear” Stanley, sound engineer for the Grateful Dead and midnight chemist. It was also home to Philip K. Dick. So it’s no surprise that Now Wait for Last Year (1966, also sees a raging Vietnam War and fierce domestic opposition) features a drug as a featured player, something more than a mere hallucinogenic and far more pernicious. There lurks within the questions of what’s real or delusion and what people, specifically what one-time lovers, owe each other. It’s as much a novel about men and women and the conflict between them as it is about alien invasion, war, and time travel.

Dick sets the novel in the near future, now nearly tomorrow for us. Earth is caught in the middle of an ages old epic war between Lilistar (‘Starmen), who resemble us, and the reegs, multi limbed insects (shades of Heinlein here?). Earth has allied with Lilistar, though the Earth leader and Eric Sweetscent, too, come to believe the reegs would be better allies; this switching of alliance comprises the central plot of the novel. JJ-180 enters the picture to toss Eric around on a roiled sea of reality, delusion, and personal angst.

Eric works for Tijuana Fur & Dye Company as physician to the mega wealthy and nearly ancient Virgil L. Ackerman. Eric specializes in artiforg, the transplanting of organs using an alien space amoeba that takes on the form of anything, including human organs and luxury furs. He has been using them to prolong Ackerman’s life. Kathy Sweetscent also works for Ackerman, acquiring historical pieces for his retreat called Wash-35, a replicate of 1935 Washington D.C., Ackerman’s hometown and his cherished memory. It’s located on Mars. Eric and Kathy have an acrimonious relationship that Eric explores in detail. Kathy, in addition to tormenting Eric in a variety of ways, also illustrates Dick’s rather skewed view of women as manipulative, hyper-critical shrews.

In the course of events, Eric gets assigned to the UN Secretary General, who is the leader of Earth, Gino “The Mole” Molinari. He’s a sickly man but a great strategist, essential to the survival of Earth. The ‘Starmen know about this assignment and to gain information and influence with Eric they addict Kathy to the new deadly drug JJ-180. She, in turn, secretly hooks Eric on it.

JJ-180 psychologically transports a person back in time (Kathy), or in some rare cases, forward (Eric), or still yet, and revelatory to Eric, between dimensions (Gino). Early in the novel, there’s some question as to whether the transporting is purely in the minds of the addicted or real. Eric uses the drug to see into the future both to foresee how the war will end and to find a cure for his addiction. Throughout, however, his main concern and obsession is Kathy and their relationship. The final question he faces in the end is what to do about a very sick and helpless Kathy. It’s really a question about living in reality or abandoning it for something easier, and one that he cannot answer for himself. He famously asks and takes the advice of an automated cab.

Readers with recognize many Dickian hallmarks within the novel, but none more than its sense of spontaneity and disjointedness, as if Dick were pulling things from the ethers left and right in a sprint to the end.

( )
  write-review | Nov 4, 2021 |
Living in Different Times

Those old enough can recall the 1960s, specifically the mid 60s when the hallucinogenic LSD became the rage. The epicenter of the LSD era was in San Francisco, home to the Merry Pranksters and the first LSD lab, established by Owsley “Bear” Stanley, sound engineer for the Grateful Dead and midnight chemist. It was also home to Philip K. Dick. So it’s no surprise that Now Wait for Last Year (1966, also sees a raging Vietnam War and fierce domestic opposition) features a drug as a featured player, something more than a mere hallucinogenic and far more pernicious. There lurks within the questions of what’s real or delusion and what people, specifically what one-time lovers, owe each other. It’s as much a novel about men and women and the conflict between them as it is about alien invasion, war, and time travel.

Dick sets the novel in the near future, now nearly tomorrow for us. Earth is caught in the middle of an ages old epic war between Lilistar (‘Starmen), who resemble us, and the reegs, multi limbed insects (shades of Heinlein here?). Earth has allied with Lilistar, though the Earth leader and Eric Sweetscent, too, come to believe the reegs would be better allies; this switching of alliance comprises the central plot of the novel. JJ-180 enters the picture to toss Eric around on a roiled sea of reality, delusion, and personal angst.

Eric works for Tijuana Fur & Dye Company as physician to the mega wealthy and nearly ancient Virgil L. Ackerman. Eric specializes in artiforg, the transplanting of organs using an alien space amoeba that takes on the form of anything, including human organs and luxury furs. He has been using them to prolong Ackerman’s life. Kathy Sweetscent also works for Ackerman, acquiring historical pieces for his retreat called Wash-35, a replicate of 1935 Washington D.C., Ackerman’s hometown and his cherished memory. It’s located on Mars. Eric and Kathy have an acrimonious relationship that Eric explores in detail. Kathy, in addition to tormenting Eric in a variety of ways, also illustrates Dick’s rather skewed view of women as manipulative, hyper-critical shrews.

In the course of events, Eric gets assigned to the UN Secretary General, who is the leader of Earth, Gino “The Mole” Molinari. He’s a sickly man but a great strategist, essential to the survival of Earth. The ‘Starmen know about this assignment and to gain information and influence with Eric they addict Kathy to the new deadly drug JJ-180. She, in turn, secretly hooks Eric on it.

JJ-180 psychologically transports a person back in time (Kathy), or in some rare cases, forward (Eric), or still yet, and revelatory to Eric, between dimensions (Gino). Early in the novel, there’s some question as to whether the transporting is purely in the minds of the addicted or real. Eric uses the drug to see into the future both to foresee how the war will end and to find a cure for his addiction. Throughout, however, his main concern and obsession is Kathy and their relationship. The final question he faces in the end is what to do about a very sick and helpless Kathy. It’s really a question about living in reality or abandoning it for something easier, and one that he cannot answer for himself. He famously asks and takes the advice of an automated cab.

Readers with recognize many Dickian hallmarks within the novel, but none more than its sense of spontaneity and disjointedness, as if Dick were pulling things from the ethers left and right in a sprint to the end.

( )
  write-review | Nov 4, 2021 |
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» Andere Autoren hinzufügen (13 möglich)

AutorennameRolleArt des AutorsWerk?Status
Dick, Philip K.Hauptautoralle Ausgabenbestätigt
Alpers, Hans JoachimNachwortCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
Berni, OlivieroUmschlagillustrationCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
Foss, ChrisUmschlagillustrationCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
Mamczak, SaschaHerausgeberCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
Mariano, MichaelUmschlagillustrationCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
Martin, AlexanderÜbersetzerCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
Moore, ChrisUmschlagillustrationCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
Wöllzenmüller, FranzUmschlaggestalterCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
Ziegler, ThomasÜbersetzerCo-Autoreinige Ausgabenbestätigt
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The apteryx-shaped building, so familiar to him, gave off its usual smoky gray light as Eric Sweetscent collapsed his wheel and managed to park in the tiny stall allocated him.
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Earth is trapped in the crossfire of an unwinnable war between two alien civilizations. Its leader is perpetually on the verge of death. And on top of that, a new drug has just entered circulation -- a drug that haphazardly sends its users traveling through time. In an attempt to escape his doomed marriage, Dr. Eric Sweetscent becomes caught up in all of it. But he has questions: Is Earth on the right side of the war? Is he supposed to heal Earth's leader or keep him sick? And can he change the harrowing future that the drug has shown him?

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Buchbeschreibung
Die Verbündeten der Erde haben die Menschen in einen aussichtslosen Krieg hineingezogen, den diese nicht wollten. Und manchmal glauben zumindest einige unter ihnen, dass die Feinde, so bizarr und fremdartig sie auch aussehen, ihnen näherstehen als die unbarmherzigen Verbündeten. Aber diese haben die irdische Regierung fest im Griff, der Diktator der Erde scheint eine machtlose Marionette zu sein. Doch der Schein muss nicht immer die Wirklichkeit sein... Als Dr. Sweetscent von seiner Frau, die selbst tragisches Opfer von Machtverstrickungen ist, zu einem Drogenabhängigen gemacht wird, ändert sich sein Leben auf einschneidende Art. Nicht nur, dass die Droge ihn in kürzester Zeit dem Tode zuführen wird, nicht nur, dass er als Leibarzt des irdischen Diktators zu einem Sicherheitsrisiko wird... Die Droge bewirkt mehr. Sie führt ihn in Parallelwelten und in die Zukunft der Erde, lässt ihn das Spiel erkennen, das andere mit den Menschen spielen. Aber wo ist der Ausweg? Der Ausweg für ihn selbst, für die Frau, die er trotz allem noch immer liebt, und für alle anderen Menschen der Erde? (Klappentext)
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