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The Ganymede Takeover by Philip K. Dick
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The Ganymede Takeover (original 1967; edition 1991)

by Philip K. Dick, Ray Nelson

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463753,458 (3.15)10
Earth has been invaded - but one human terrorist has discovered a weapon which might change the course of the war! Earth has been taken over by the Ganymedians, a race of telepathic worm-like aliens whose instinct for survival has overridden any human attempt to resist their rule. But there is one man who may have discovered a way to defeat them. Dr Balkani has created a machine which distorts reality, and therefore will allow a determined human to avoid the Ganymedians' telepathic oversight. But there is one problem - Balkani is a worm-kisser, a servant of the invaders, and may not allow his invention to be used against them ...… (more)
Member:P1g5purt
Title:The Ganymede Takeover
Authors:Philip K. Dick
Other authors:Ray Nelson
Info:Legend paperbacks (1991), Paperback, 192 pages
Collections:Your library
Rating:
Tags:PKD, SCI-FI

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The Ganymede Takeover by Philip K. Dick (1967)

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Showing 5 of 5
Two authors. Both of them on drugs and a least one of them insane. This is an incompetently written novel.

The premise is that alien space worms have taken over the earth. The last hold-out against the invaders is a band of Nation of Islam guerrilla fighters who are holed up in the hills of Tennessee.

The novel is chock full of ideas, any one of which could be expanded in to novel of it’s own, but none of which appear to have any real connection to the plot in a way which brings meaning to the book. The most developed theme (if theme is a word that can be applied to this novel) is that of American racial politics. Do the authors have anything to say on the matter? I have no idea, and I’ve literally just finished reading it. You can look for meaning, but just when you think you’ve found it the authors will contradict themselves. They appear to be in as great a state of confusion as I am. Looking for meaning here is like looking for canals on Mars.

Early on in the novel we’re told that a precog has predicted that the occupation of earth will fail. So we’re in a deterministic universe. This immediately sucks all tension out of something about a struggle for survival. And we’re told this very early on so it must be important, yet it never has any impact on anything ever again. ( )
  Lukerik | Jun 2, 2022 |
What a mixed bag Philip K. Dick was. it's very hard to take any of this pot-boiler with giant worms running the Earth seriously. It reads like his early "anything for a dollar" pulp, but appeared after some of his best work in the 1960s, including Man in the High Castle and Martian Time-Slip. According to the Intertubes, it began as a sequel the High Castle. The Nelson/Dick collaboration is seamless to my eye, and there are the usual Dick tropes -- philosophical taxicabs, psycho-babble, and illusion generating machines. But none of them catch hold, not even the loss of reality, in the way that those tropes do in the best of Dick.

For Dick completists. ( )
1 vote ChrisRiesbeck | Nov 1, 2020 |

This is just silly.

You can try making it something else – I notice a blog interpreting it as an allegory for the war in Vietnam – but it isn’t worth investing meaning into. Dick’s co-author, is in fact quoted as saying:

Since we were “only practicing” for “the big one”, we wrote the book we did in a spirit of almost hysterical hilarity, enclosing weird newspaper clippings and Beatle bubblegum cards in the installments of the ongoing story we mailed back and forth. When we met –first at his place in East Oakland and later at his other place in Marin County near the water, we often spent more time smoking grass, dropping acid and flirting with each others’ wives than working.


Rest here:


http://alittleteaalittlechat.wordpress.com/2014/05/09/the-ganymede-takeover-by-p... ( )
  bringbackbooks | Jun 16, 2020 |
Well, that was weird as all get out. ( )
  Jon_Hansen | Apr 2, 2017 |
Earth has been taken over by the highly intelligent serpent-like beings from Ganymede. All of civilized society is under their dominion - the only place left on earth that does not cowtow to the Ganys is rural Tennessee. The military administrator assigned to pacify Tennessee can't get the job done, so a civilian is brought in to quell the unreset. Unfortunately for Ganymede, this administrator becomes obsessed with the writings of a brilliant but deranged psychiatrist named Balkani. And the fate of two worlds rests in the disinterested hands of a former Gany sympathizer.

This was a very, very quick read - maybe four hours to go cover to cover. While there were some interesting ideas, I dislike Balkani being the sole source of everything associated with Earth's only hope: Percy's telepathy, the robots used to facilitate Percy and Jane's escape, the writings used to confound and corrupt Mekkis, and the ultimate weapon that ensures Earth's freedom. That seems to be an awful lot to come from a single man, no matter how brilliant or ground-breaking he may be.

The only thing that was slightly surprising at the end was the disposition of Gus. I had assumed he'd be dead - but he ends up getting what he wants but, of course, it's not going to be the way he wants it ( )
2 vote helver | Nov 18, 2011 |
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Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Dick, Philip K.primary authorall editionsconfirmed
Nelson, Ray Faradaymain authorall editionsconfirmed
Foss, ChrisCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Gaughan, JackCover artistsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
Tate, IawaTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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Earth has been invaded - but one human terrorist has discovered a weapon which might change the course of the war! Earth has been taken over by the Ganymedians, a race of telepathic worm-like aliens whose instinct for survival has overridden any human attempt to resist their rule. But there is one man who may have discovered a way to defeat them. Dr Balkani has created a machine which distorts reality, and therefore will allow a determined human to avoid the Ganymedians' telepathic oversight. But there is one problem - Balkani is a worm-kisser, a servant of the invaders, and may not allow his invention to be used against them ...

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