Description
The horrible devastation of nuclear war of the Western and Eastern Blocks has won in neutering the exterior of the world. No humans and animals, and all living things, can nowadays live there and every human in these sides, have departed to the places constructed miles below the overlay where they generally toil to manufacture the warfare paraphernalia needed to go through the combat. The real fight among these mighty powers has been led by robots called as Ledeys since only they can withstand the dreadful levels of radiation brought about by the steady explosion. Philip Kindred Dick was a US science fiction author. Philip revealed theoretical, social, and political subject matters in his master works with topics led by monopolistic corporations, other worlds, authoritarian administrations, and alternative states of awareness. His writings showed his curiosity in metaphysics and theology, and often always illustrated on his life occurrences in taking into the nature of actuality, identity, drug abuse, schizophrenia, and otherworldly practices. He was born in Illinois before residing to California, he started printing sci-fi tales in the 1950s, primarily seeking few commercial prestige. His 1962 other historical novel The Man in the High Castle gotten Philip first attribute, such as a Hugo Award for Best Novel. He ensued with sci-fi tales including Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? In 1968 and Ubik in 1969. His 1974 story Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said won the John W. Campbell Memorial Award for best novel. Resulting a series of devotional involvements in February-March 1974, his writings held more overtly with subjects of theology, philosophy, and the nature of reality, as novels including A Scanner Darkly in 1977 and VALIS in 1981. A book of his non-fiction work on these matters was printed retrospectively as The Exegesis of Philip K. Dick in 2011.
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