I'm a big Pynchon fan, too, so don't get me wrong here, but it seems
to me like the main difference between Dick's writing style and Pynchon's--or
at least, the difference that mostly accounts for Dick being treated as a
"pulp" author with some interesting ideas whereas Pynchon is
considered a major "literary" figure--is simply that Dick tends to
write in crisp, straightforward sentences that just directly say what he means
to say, whereas Pynchon's writing is (in)famously dense with allusion and
rambling esoteric figurative expressions to the point where it can be an
intellectual exercise in its own right just trying to figure out what the hell
Pynchon is trying to say.
All of which makes major Dick novels like “Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?” or “Radio Free Albemuth” sort of resemble, IMHO, what
“Gravity's Rainbow” might have looked like if Pynchon had been working with
editors who expected him to actually keep tight deadlines.
I think Dick was really gifted as a wry satirist, too, and this is
something I think he's often under-appreciated for. Probably my favourite
single episode in all of Dick's stories I've ever read--and I was quite
overjoyed to see this faithfully recreated in the film adaptation--is still the
"suicide" sequence from “A Scanner Darkly”. In short, I don't think
Dick was ever bad at writing--he just doesn't seem to have had any real
interest in the kind of writing that people like James Joyce or William
Burroughs (or Pynchon, for whom to my mind it seems that both Joyce and
Burroughs were major stylistic influences) were famous for. I mean, in the 60's
it was still nigh-impossible for anyone writing SF at all to be
taken seriously by the "literary" world, which is important to
remember as well--in the minds of smart, educated, respected literary critics,
you simply didn't write about aliens or robots or time machines if you even
wanted to be taken seriously as a "good writer", so I think it stands
to reason that people like that were never an audience that Dick was even
trying to impress or appeal to. He was writing for teenage boys and maladjusted
stoners who didn't exactly run in sophisticated high-culture circles, so I
imagine those audiences were really the people to whose tastes he tailored his
style. I do think that with Dick, the whole is somehow greater than the sum of
the parts. There are a few books that stand out as more perfect, or more
complete, than the others, but in general I think it is the cumulative impact
of the themes across the whole body of work that is his greatest achievement.
Some of his books are quite flawed, or even weak - yet almost all feature at
least one startlingly brilliant idea.
I read lots of Phil Dick as a teenager and it really put a perspective on the world that all the Asimov, Clarke and
other SF
authors really didn't... It's not that Phil Dick was more SF than
the others; it's just the psychedelic perception manipulating stories seemed to
be more vivid...One of the things that I enjoy about Phil’s books are that his lead
characters lack "agency." When things go cross-eyed, they have a
tendency to freeze up and simply endure whatever madness their damaged universe
dishes out. It adds a certain plausibility to his stories -- we've all been, or
we know, the guy who can't get it together, even when reality itself is up for
grabs.
The thing to remember about Dick is he was inventive. The mechanical
SF of today is pre-packaged, made to order product. Dick (who could have
written about that) explored darkly funny worlds. When someone says he couldn't
write, who are they comparing him to... today's writers with the publisher's
crack team of craftsmen: Alpha & Beta readers, Restructuring, Copy-editing,
Proofreaders? (Martin and Rothfuss come to mind) For that level of writing support, the books of today had better
be good. And yet they don't have a tenth of Dick's creativity. Did Dick even
have an agent? The Scott Meredith Agency - his last attempt to get a literary
agent, returned his manuscripts, didn't it? Those who say he couldn't write are
glossing over the reality of publishing. The question is: does the carefully
crafted fiction of now bear comparison with him? I've studied Trad-Pub genre
offerings for the last twenty years; I know what my answer would be.
Dick was not at all into dystopia or any kind of
prospective/political SF. His main interest, in his life like in
his art, was personal identity and all the doubts surrounding it. Who am I? Is
the world around me true or an illusion? It was a philosophical and
idiosyncratic SF that put him in another dimension than the rest
of the genre. Emmanuel Carrère calls Dick the Dostoevsky of the 20th century,
which is something I never agreed with. There is only one Dostoevsky, who was moments from being executed,
reprieved and sent to a Siberian prison. Later released, became a gambling
addict and after authoring some of the most distinctive, profound works of
Literature became a national figure in Russia. Carriere is not correct with his
comparison. Any more than Dostoevsky was a Russian Phillip K. Dick. "Who am I? What is my place in the world?" I can see why
Carrère would appreciate Dick the same way Truffaut and French cultural
commentators idolized David Goodis. He reads differently in their language and
culture. Whereas in English, both of them come across as unable to escape from
their pulp vision of the world. Orwell was always suspicious of novels that
eschewed politics completely. Rightly so. I would think that Dick like Ayn Rand
who asked the same questions, "who am I?, etc.) fantasize about an island or planet all their own in which
they do not have to share anything with others. Dick inhabits a solipsistic
universe and I like some of my fiction thus. Heinlein is another case in point when it comes to solipsistic universes...I've written about it elsewhere.
“A Scanner Darkly” is a fine example of his literary
world; he inhabits a solipsistic terrain which is the most extreme
form of subjectivity. I get a measure of nihilism, and full-fledged meaning,
reading him. I have to say, though, Kafka and Borges are two authors that I
don't particularly enjoy reading. I know they are stalwarts of the modernist
canon but I find them gimmicky, Borges with his inverted, convoluted,
Kabbalistic fables and Kafka with his Central European father/Emperor
psychological complexes. Banishing politics from literature has robbed it of
much of its context. This is why Phil
Dick is such a hero to me. Yes, he could set it aside
but he addressed it, as well. I am almost sure Phil Dick and his descent
into self-destruction via drugs was a response to the direction America went in
from the 50's to the 80's. It's evident in many films and books during that
period.
SF = Speculative Fiction.
