The Man in High Castle

I learned that The Man in High Castle exists after my sister mentioned seeing imperial Japanese vehicles that said something like “Imperial Japanese Government of San Francisco” on them in her neighbourhood, so the TV series The Man in High Castle must be filming close by. An alternate reality novel where the allies lost the second world war sounded interesting, and since the TV series is pretty successful it’s easy to borrow the e-book from my library.

In a story where the Nazis and Imperial Japanese won the second world war race is important, and treated very differently from the how it is in the real world. Reading a 1962 novel in 2019 is slightly weird with regards to race. Philip K Dick does not seem to be racist, (from some internet reading it seems like wasn’t, and dreamed of true racial equality, which we are far from achieving), but word choices made in the early sixties would not be made today, and someone who hasn’t read much from the mid 20-th century recently it’s slightly jarring.

It also took me a while to get used to the way Tagomi’s dialogue, (both inner and outer), is written. It feels like sentences are structured the way that native Japanese-speakers speak English when they’re functional English speakers but yet to achieve mastery. I don’t know what Philip K Dick is trying to show, maybe he’s trying to portray an accent, (but other Japanese characters seem to speak more fluently than Tagomi thinks), maybe he’s trying to show that Tagomi thinks differently from many other people, or maybe something else altogether.

I felt like sometimes we spent way too long inside characters heads, especially Tagomi. This isn’t my favourite thing to read in any book, and would have preferred less, but it’s also important to the character of The Man in High Castle. In my first reading I missed Tagomi stepping into an alternate timeline where the Embarcadro Expressway exists. Going back and re-reading that section I can see it, but it’s not so clear that someone not familiar with the 60s, and not familiar with San Francisco, would notice it.

It wasn’t until after I had finished reading the book that I found Philip K Dick is also the author of famous books like Total Recall, Minority Report, A Scanner Darkly, and Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep. Because I went in blind I did not expect any science-fiction, so when the sci-fi touches appeared I either missed them entirely, (Tagomi), or was surprised and entertained. I will be reading more Philip K Dick, and paying better attention when I do.

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The Whistler

Time for an escape. The Whistler was enjoyable, maybe not as much as something like Sycamore Row, but I have yet to read a truly bad John Grisham novel.

But, I looked at some of the discussion questions at the end of the book and they started to poke some holes in the way some relationships developed over the course of the book. It would be a good exercise to start writing out answers to any discussion points provided by the publisher. It might make me a more critical reader.

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10% Happier

Funny lights you see behind your eyes when they’re closed real tight.

I was worried that I was the only person that sees those. They help me fall asleep. Apparently Dan Harris sees them too.

The idea of exercising my mind is interesting, and meditation seems is a common thread among many successful people. 10% Happier seems tis a good introduction to the concept of mindfulness meditation that has its roots in Buddhism. I’ve tried meditation in the past using the Headspace app and 10% Happier got me interested again. Interestingly, even though Dan Harris starts out agnostic, and 10% Happier made me more interested in the “woo-woo” side of meditation. I’ll have to do some more reading.

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The Martian

After some history books it was time for the future. Since the future is unwritten, it was time for fiction. The Martian was pretty great. I like Mark, and he was able to surprise me throughout the book. Other than being left behind on Mars he was pretty lucky. At one point, when he thinks he’s really going to be able to go home, he talks about how it’ll be strange to heave his home, and I thought, “oh no, here comes the PTSD.”

 

 

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