Lies, Inc.: Fulfilling an Author's Ill-Advised Wish

Philip K. Dick never achieved the recognition he deserved in his lifetime and even his induction this year into the Science Fiction Hall of Fame was long overdue. Unfortunately, Lies, Inc. has value only in allowing a reader to see in one "story" both some of Dick's standard fare and the author at his worst.

During a time in which he was having "visions" that many attribute to serious mental disorder, Dick decided to publish in novel form what he considered a two-part story, but half of which had been rejected by the editor of a science fiction magazine when submitted. Dick died before fulfilling that desire. Lies, Inc. is Dick's literary executor deciding to implement Dick's disastrous decision.

Lies, Inc. begins with the previously published novella, "The Unteleported Man." The Earth is overcrowded and strained, and America is a police state. The citizenry is encouraged to emmigrate to an Eden-like planet via the near instantaneous process of "teleportation." Emigrants will be gone forever, though, because it is only a one way trip. Our protagonist, whose family business was crushed by the company that developed teleportation, begins to doubt the validity of the glowing reports sent back from that planet. He fights to travel there to investigate on the space ship his father invented, an 18-year trip each way.

As he ultimately embarks on his journey, the original novella has plopped into its midst the material rejected by the magazine editor. The insertion is 100 pages of an almost unreadable tale heavy on hallucination and almost wholly lacking in storyline or coherence. After the 100 pages of nonsense, we end up back to "The Unteleported Man." By this point, though, that novella has been decimated.

I speculate Lies, Inc. saw print only because, after a lifetime of relative obscurity, Dick has recently been somewhat of a Hollywood favorite. In the last couple of years, two of his short stories were the basis for Paycheck and Minority Report. More films based on Dick's works are in production. Yet, evidently hoping to capitalize on Dick's current popularity, his literary executor released a work that detracts from Dick's reputation. The executor should have realized the wise decision made by the editor who rejected the material inserted here. The only wiser decision that editor could have made was to insist that material be burned. Then Dick's wish to resurrect that material could not have been realized.

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Article Author: Tim Gebhart

Tim Gebhart lives in Sioux Falls, SD, where he practices law in order to provide shelter for his family, his dogs, and his books. He is a member of the National Book Critics Circle and his blog de guerre is A Progressive on the Prairie.

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  • Lies, Inc.: A Novel Lies, Inc.: A Novel

    A masterwork by Philip K. Dick, this is the final, expanded version of the novellla The Unteleported Man, which Dick worked on shortly before his death. In Lies, Inc., fans of the science fiction legend ...

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Article comments

  • 1 - DrPat

    Jun 04, 2005 at 10:28 pm

    Blade Runner (Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?). Total Recall (We Can Remember It for You Wholesale). Screamers ("Second Variety"). Imposter (Imposter). And, of course, Paycheck and Minority Report - and also two new films in production, A Scanner Darkly (from Dick's novel of the same title) and Next (based on the chilling story "The Golden Man").

    Yep, I think we can see why Hollywood might be in love with adaptations of Phillip Dick stuff...

  • 2 - Aaman

    Jun 04, 2005 at 11:56 pm

    Is the inserted section able to stand on its own as a story?

  • 3 - Tim Gebhart

    Jun 05, 2005 at 10:50 am

    Not without a bit of reworking because it involves many of the same characters who have "teleported" to the other planet.

  • 4 - DrPat

    Jun 05, 2005 at 1:49 pm

    I just bought a re-released paperback edition of Dick's The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch. Nearly the whole Dick ouevre has been released in these "classic" editions, not quite trade-sized, but larger than mass paperback size.

    Also, collections of his short stories have been renamed for the included stories that have been made into movies: Second Variety (originally sub-titled The Father-Thing, Minority Report and We Can Remember It for You Wholesale (originally sub-titled The Days of Perky Pat).

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