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Eye In The Sky by Philip K. Dick
Gollancz. 243 page enlarged paperback. Price: £ 6.99
(UK). ISBN: 0-575-07456-6
check out website(s): www.orionbooks.co.uk
Are
you paranoid? Do you imagine that the world has an agenda and it
is to destroy you or perhaps your self-confidence?
Don't read this book then because it explores what
it is like when the world really is out to get you. At the beginning,
Hamilton has been called in to explain why he is being fired. It's
not him they are worried about but his wife who appears to be a
'fellow traveller' of the Communist Party.
She
has shown an unhealthy interest in the Communist and other workers'
parties. The year is 1957 and Hamilton works in a defence installation
in the United States.
His record has been closely scrutinised by the security
officer, McFeyffe, who has decided reluctantly to inform the boss.
Hamilton is incensed and also worried how far his wife Marsha's
interest has extended.
He meets her as he leaves the office and despite everything
they decide to visit the Bevatron, a new reactor that is open to
viewing by the public and McFeyffe tags along. Taken round by a
young Negro guide with a mixed group of their fellow Americans there
is a horrific accident.
Awaiting rescue, they all fall into unconsciousness
except one. They are taken to hospital they seem to make a rapid
recovery. However, it seems the world has subtly changed. They find
that they are in a world that requires expressions of faith to make
even the simplest machinery work.
Hamilton gets a new job but has to pray for the right
salary level which falls manna-like from Heaven. He and McFeyffe
decide to investigate and are carried into the heavens and past
a great staring eye. They are in a world governed by one individual's
subconscious and find they must fight their way through all the
dominant personalities before they can truly get home.
Each successive world becomes more and more dangerous
to he group as paranoia reaches its height until finally they reach
Marsha's world where they must struggle against bloated Capitalists
and the Party to find out the truth.
Dick once again gets in first with a most paranoid
study written at a time of great uncertainty when the clock slowly
ticked towards a nuclear war. Fear of the unknown and particularly
of Communism was at its height.
It might seem like old hat now that the great USSR
is reduced to a smaller role in the world but, at the time it was
written, people where building nuclear shelters in their back gardens.
Whatever your feelings about politics or otherwise,
it is a riveting read with the individual worlds skilfully created
weaving fear and disgust into the tale.
As with his characters in other works, however, they
are merely expressions of an aspect of personality he wishes to
explore and really go no deeper than that.
Without expecting too much it offers an interesting
retrospective and of course a 'fantastic' twist on the McCarthy
period of history.
Sue Davies
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