A Tale of Two Dedications

high_castle_old_01I own several copies of Philip K. Dick’s The Man in the High Castle.  The oldest is a battered used paperback copy that I found online of the Popular Library edition from 1962 and was published in arrangement with G.P. Putnam’s Sons.  At the time of that printing the cost for the book was sixty cents.  That’s not how much I paid for it.

The second version I have is the one I first read back around the summer of 1993. It is the First Vintage Books Edition, July 1992. Nowadays, however, I re-read it in electronic form, via the Kindle edition of the Houghton Mifflin Harcourt imprint.

In the older paperback edition, the dedication reads:

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Anne R. Dick (PKD’s third wife) in her memoirs recalls:

“Phil dedicated the novel to me … I wasn’t sure I liked this phrasing. I never did quite understand it.”

Larry Sutin, however, in his PKD biography suggests it was a thank you to Anne for pushing PKD to rent the “Hovel,” a small hut up the road, from the house they lived in together, on a property belonging to the local sheriff:

“Phil had developed the habit of coming out of his study to read new passages to Anne. It wore her out, and she suggested that he find a work space away from the house.”

“It was a drastic break. But in the isolated Hovel, Phil the writer was not merely reborn, but transformed.”

Gregg Rickman recounts Anne saying:

“We were spending a lot of time together, but I needed a couple of hours without paying attention to Phil. I asked him to move his study outside the house.”

Rickman also says that:

“… [Phil] was telling Anne that he loved it there, and that it made him really comfortable.”

Thereafter, despite Anne’s entreaties PKD refused to move his writing back to their house. Larry Sutin writes:

“Anne regretted his absence at once, but Phil would not change his mind, though he too suffered from the separation”

Anne recalls:

“But although I urged him to, he wouldn’t move back. He said, ‘My mother taught me to take the consequences of my actions. I never chew my cud twice. Never look back. Something might be gaining on you.'”

Today, however, in the latest the editions, the dedication reads differently:

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Tessa was PKD’s fifth wife. Anne, in later years, would remember when PKD wrote to Laura (their daughter):

“You might tell your mother that The Man in the High Castle is supposed to be republished here in the United States again, and it’s dedicated to her, although she didn’t like the dedication. I guess I could change it when the novel comes out again…. You might ask her if she wants me to. Love, Daddy”

She also emphasizes that PKD never talked to her directly about this and that she didn’t pay attention to the letter, believing PKD would never change the dedication; but later her:

“third daughter, Tandy, picked up a copy of The Man in the High Castle at a bookstore in order to show a friend Phil’s dedication to her mother. [Tandy] was shocked to see that the novel was now dedicated to Tessa. [Anne] felt bad and, as usual, couldn’t believe that Phil would do such a thing, but perhaps he’d thought he’d asked [her] if [she] still wanted the dedication—and [she] hadn’t bothered to answer. “


Sources

Rickman, Gregg (1989), To The High Castle: Philip K. Dick: A Life 1928-1963, Long Beach, Ca.: Fragments West/The Valentine Press

Dick, Anne R. The Search for Philip K. Dick. Tachyon Publications. Kindle Edition.

Lawrence Sutin. Divine Invasions: A Life of Philip K. Dick. Kindle Edition.

Dick, Philip K. The Man in the High Castle. Popular Library (1962).

Dick, Philip K. The Man in the High Castle. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. Kindle Edition.


Disclaimer: this is an amateur attempt, and I claim no academic or inside knowledge.  I am only a fan, and in no way affiliated with PKD or his Estate. I’ll make sure to credit my sources, but errors will be made, and I will be solely responsible.  Feel free to correct me, but please do so with a gentle hand. Let’s talk first.

Jubilee, an Inspiration to High Castle

jubilee_01Bring the Jubilee is a 1953 novel of an alternate American Civil War history by Ward Moore. It first appeared, in a shorter format, serialized in the same 1952 issue of Fantasy & Science Fiction as PKD’s story The Little Movement. The phrase “Bring the Jubilee” is a reference to the chorus of a popular military song: “Marching Through Georgia”. There are many other reputed sources of inspiration for PKD’s Hugo Award winning novel, The Man in the High Castle, such as:

If it had Happened Otherwise (1931) by Winston Churchill – Alternate What-If historical essay on the Civil War;

Sidewise in Time (1934) by Murray Leinster – Yet another Civil War alternative history;

The Probable Man (1941) by Alfred Bester – World War II, Nazis, Time-Travel, and a Castle;

Barrier (1942) By Anthony Boucher – Time-Travel into the future where an Authoritarian state has erected barriers preventing backward Time-Travel;

Two Dooms (1958) by Cyril Kornbluth – A defeated US divided between German and Japanese Zones; and

The Big Time (1958) by Fritz Lieber – Nazi Victory.  Also won a Hugo award.

Jubilee, however, has consistently been referenced in PKD’s historical record as the main spark for High Castle. Per Rickman:

“We do know for a certainty that Phil Dick read and enjoyed Ward Moore’s classic alternate world novel …”

Anne R. Dick in her memoirs fondly remembers:

“Phil had suggested that I read Ward Moore’s novel, Bring the Jubilee. I borrowed it from the library and read it with delight. Bring the Jubilee is an alternate-reality novel set in a world in which the South has won the Civil War. A footnote in it refers to a novel written by a Northerner about a world in which the North has won the Civil War. It wouldn’t be our North, but a North that a Southern writer living in a victorious South would imagine. I told Phil, ‘I wish Ward Moore had developed that fascinating idea further. I wonder what that world was like?’”

Sutin flatly states:

“Phil was influenced by Ward Moore’s novel Bring the Jubilee …”

Given the Southern Confederate subject matter, I was originally hesitant to read it; but I rationalized that it was necessary if I was to better understand PKD and his High Castle. I bjubilee_02ought and read the Wildside Press; Reprint edition (January 1, 2009). Delightedly, I was somewhat surprised when it proved to be a more progressive writing–at least for the 1950s era it was written in.  Nonetheless it is archaic; and its treatment of minorities and women, in my opinion, would bristle today’s younger millennial audience.

Jubilee’s fictional point of divergence occurs in July 1863 when the Confederate States of America wins the Battle of Gettysburg and subsequently declares victory in a conflict referred to within the book as the “War of Southron Independence” on July 4, 1864, after the surrender of the United States of America. The novel takes place in an impoverished United States in the mid-20th century as war brews between the Confederacy and the German Union. After many adventures, Hodge Backmaker, the main protagonist, decides to travel back in time to witness the moment when the South wins the Civil War.

I can now discern why this book would appeal to a young berkeleyan Phil Dick. It espoused a protestant work ethic, and offered what would be considered liberal viewpoints–in education and the treatment of minorities–in 1950s America. It also included philosophical and psychological debates on free will and indentured servitude. Plus, it offered a fantasy driven love triangle between Hodge and two diametrically opposed female leads–the intellectual dominatrix physicist versus the wholesome and submissive young rich debutante. Rich in detail, it presents a retro steampunk-like novel in which steam powered modes of transportation (minibiles and dirigibles), alongside the Morse Code telegraph, serve as the main driving technologies. In the end it is a basic time-travel tale, but it also uniquely posits the idea that despite the hero’s time traveling alterations for the better (our world of the 1950s, where the north wins and civil rights for blacks advance, is identified as the superior of the two) there remains the possibility that the Southron empire continues to exist in a parallel timeline. If only Hodge possessed the required scientific knowledge, he could in theory go back home to his original timeline1.  The book abruptly ends with an “editorial note”, where Hodge’s personal effects, and the story we just read, are newly discovered in our future timeline.

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Footnotes

1Didn’t the MCU’s Avengers Endgame most recently make use of a similar plot device–if you change the past, you create a new parallel universe that branches off from the moment you changed said past — but when you travel into the future, you return to your original future, not the new one created by the changes you made in the past?


Sources

Moore, Ward.  Bring the Jubilee. Wildside Press; Reprint edition (January 1, 2009)

Rickman, Gregg (1989), To The High Castle: Philip K. Dick: A Life 1928-1963, Long Beach, Ca.: Fragments West/The Valentine Press

Dick, Anne R. The Search for Philip K. Dick. Tachyon Publications. Kindle Edition.

Lawrence Sutin. Divine Invasions: A Life of Philip K. Dick. Kindle Edition.

Carrère, Emmanuel. I Am Alive and You Are Dead. Henry Holt and Co.. Kindle Edition.


Disclaimer: this is an amateur attempt, and I claim no academic or inside knowledge.  I am only a fan, and in no way affiliated with PKD. I’ll make sure to credit my sources, but errors will be made, and I will be solely responsible.  Feel free to correct me, but please do so with a gentle hand. Let’s talk first.