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The Owl In Daylight [Paperback]

Tessa B. Dick (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Book Description

January 8, 2009
Like "The Matrix" and "Jacob's Ladder", this story present alternate worlds in a kaleidoscope of fantasy. A morality tale set in several alternate worlds.


Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Wife and best friend of science fiction author Philip K. Dick (Bladerunner), Tessa B. Dick has been publishing a variety of fiction, non-fiction and poetry since 1969. She taught English and communications at Chapman University for 12 years.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 216 pages
  • Publisher: CreateSpace (January 8, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1441435816
  • ISBN-13: 978-1441435811
  • Product Dimensions: 8.8 x 6 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,954,612 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

The wife of science fiction author Philip K. Dick, Tessa B. Dick has been publishing her creative writing since 1969, when she sold an article with photographs to Alive! magazine.

After teaching English and Communications at Chapman University for 12 years, she retired in order to devote full time to her writing.

Her memoir Philip K. Dick: Remembering Firebright tells the story behind her husband's "pink light" experiences, in which God spoke through the beside radio.


 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
5.0 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A wonderful creation of real and imagined events, May 14, 2009
This review is from: The Owl In Daylight (Paperback)
I have to thank Tessa Dick for writing and publishing this novel. In many respects this took bravura and determination.

I've been a fan of Philip K. Dick ever since I bought "The Zap Gun" in Gianopolis Book Shop in Addis Ababa when I was 12, in 1968. I've read everything published except "Nick and the Glumming" (I'll get that one yet) and each novel, mainstream or science fiction, more than once. Some. . .more than thrice. His work has moved me, has shaped me. I share a deep interest in gnosis and early Christianity, I share a deep wish to see compassion and love and joy among humans. I was fortunate to receive a letter in response to one I sent him, just months before he left us. I will always cherish the few paragraphs he sent me. More than any other author he has been an interactive part of my life. I never met him, but I feel he is a friend, a support.

Tessa Dick has taken real events from her life with Phil and her vision of the final novel that Phil failed to write and woven a tapestry of a way lost and found that I read in just a handful of sittings, magnetically drawn to the pages. Reading, I felt the impact of the events of the final decade of Phil's life, I sensed a different understanding of their details and development, I enjoyed a tightening up of loose streams of speculation and passion. This novel I believe really does represent many facets and moments that Philip K. Dick would have written, it had the vision and verve of a Dick novel. Centering much of the story on music also pleased me as music has been a constant in my life, a medium for excitment and contentment and exploration.

I will read this one again, and likely again, and thank you Ms. Dick, thank you very much for the effort and the will and the courage.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Owl in Daylight, March 9, 2009
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Owl In Daylight (Paperback)
I found this book to be like an onion..

Each page revealed another layer to

the developing story.I had a vague

idea as to the story line before I

bought the book.The concept may be

a bit difficult for some people to

grasp but Tessa excells in weaving

together an engaging,endearing and

at times unsettling work.

Once I cracked the cover I could

not put it down..An intrest in things

esoteric may be required maybe not

as things are not as they seem ..
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4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A STAR RISES IN THE AMERICAN LITERARY HEAVENS, August 5, 2009
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This review is from: The Owl In Daylight (Paperback)
While reading Tessa Dick's memoir PHILIP K. DICK: REMEMBERING FIREBRIGHT I turned down the ears of perhaps fifteen pages I meant to come back to and speak of when writing this review--but at last I was overwhelmed with questions. Nonetheless, as you can see, I give the book five stars for its corrections of the PKD myth and for a certain naiveté in the writing that adds to its interest. This is after all by the woman PKD married twice, lived with for most of his last ten years, and left as his widow. Her ingenuousness here and there should not disqualify the book from the PKD canon of commentary. How could it, although on Amazon she takes issue with Lawrence Sutin's biography of PKD, a book I've not read.

Tessa Dick at first seems saner than her fear-ridden and wobbly husband. But within a few pages after she marries him (she's 18, he's 42) she falls hip-deep into his paranoia and for much of the book seems as nutty as he. How do I mean nutty? It would be unfair to Tessa and perhaps to PKD himself for me to list their mass of shared illusions, since she often accepts them as just and sane. However, during their later years her interest in taking a few college courses makes him fear she'll find a younger lover and this thought drives him into leaving Tessa, renting another apartment, divorcing her and taking on another helpmate. But Tessa's soon back with him, editing A SCANNER DARKLY (which they worked on for eight years, and is perhaps his best written and most poised long work). She helps gather together what he completes of the VALIS trilogy and cares for him during all of his unending and relentless breakdowns. She makes clear that his breakdowns did not stem from drugs. She never saw him take an illegal drug during their marriage(s).

I won't describe Phil's phobias since she defends his lifelong raptness with them and tries to explain their sources. The reader even begins to believe that the U.S. government may indeed have been gathering information about Phil. I've read the government's stupid Cold War files on Arthur Miller and Norman Mailer from the same period and greater blunt-brained idiocy would be hard to find. All youngish and unread government agents who gather info and write reports about liberal and radical writers seeking change and yet have not read these writers' works are dunderheads. And PKD fearing himself on the FBI's Cold War hit list read their intelligence-gathering into every little twist of events.

She tells us that "Contrary to popular belief he did not churn out a complete novel every few days. He did type furiously for about three weeks, but he didn't even sit down at the typewriter until he had worked out the entire story in his head and in conversations with me and others."

None of the eight films made from his works gets her full approval and she points out their flaws, most often in the scripts, and yet admires the partial successes in BLADE RUNNER and the stunning A MINORITY REPORT and much of A SCANNER DARKLY. By the way, TOTAL RECALL (taken from WE CAN REMEMBER IT FOR YOU WHOLESALE) is now being remade, and she hopes it will be more faithful to Phil's vision than the Arnold Schwarznegger version (which I found quite enjoyable largely because of Arnold. Let me add that for me the single most powerful character in a PKD movie adaptation was that by Robert Downey Jr. as James Barris in A SCANNER DARKLY. Downey gives a master class in acting and making the text your own).

As for PKD's famous vision in 1974 that produced the unfinished VALIS trilogy, he'd had oral surgery and later been given Percodan for his pain. Earlier this year I broke a hip and was given Percodan and had the very same colored lights and shapes and dots that Phil had but I did not call them a divine invasion, as he did. But then I am not paranoid and my firebright sphere did not channel me to masters of the mysteries of the universe as did Phil's. And last summer when my cat lay down and died on the lawn I did not think that the cat had taken its death as one that was meant as a hit at me. In Phil's case his cat Pinky saved Phil from cancer. Tessa herself suspects that "Given the presence of powerful electronic equipment in the apartment next door, it is most likely that we were exposed to microwaves."

"Phil held two beliefs at the same time. First, human agents had brainwashed him. Second, demons had attacked him. They were not mutually exclusive. . . The demons, or the agents, might have followed him from San Rafael to Canada, abducted him and subjected him to both interrogation and mind control. We didn't worry about whether the demons were real, but only about whether we could stop the psychic attacks. . . "

"Phil theorized that we were actually living in ancient Rome . . . The world of 1974 was an illusion, and no real time had passed in almost two thousand years. The modern world was simply overlaid, resting on top of ancient Rome. The Empire never ended. He was informed of this fact, not only by his visions, but also by time travelers who instructed him. He said that they were hiding in the corners of our living room. . . Phil said that they were very timid and expressed shock when they realized that he could see them."

It's only fair that I mention that, despite being the second edition, this work is self-published and has many misspellings and errors that would not take place in a well-edited book. And yet Tessa Dick speaks often herein of proofing her husband's work, not to speak of the editorial authority lent to her by her master's degree and published stories and other literary work. Nonetheless, most of these textual mishaps cannot be defended. She has written THE OWL IN DAYLIGHT, a novel which I believe means to complete the VALIS trilogy pretty much as Phil may have meant it to end. I haven't read it but looking through it I sense its pages have gone through more rigorous editing.

I read PHILIP K. DICK: REMEMBERING FIREBRIGHT with interest and at times amazement. Library of America, by the way, has brought out three volumes of PKD's novels, edited by Jonathan Lethem, and in October will offer these three volumes boxed. That's pretty nifty; and even adds some heft to Tessa's books as commentaries on a star risen in the American literary heavens.
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