Saturday, January 16, 2021

SFL Archives: Real life Encounters with Philip K Dick in the 1970's aka the possible inspirations behind VALIS, FLOW MY TEARS & SCANNER DARKLY

 On occasion the weirdness of Philip K Dick's real life exceeding the weirdness of PKD's writing gets brought up in the SFL Archives. 

Philip K Dick has always been one of the most fascinating authors I have come across. Reality and fiction, unreality into real life events, the distinctions between everything blurred when Philip K Dick got involved. 


SFL ARCHIVES VOLUME 06 : VALIS inspiration?

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Date: 20 Aug 1982 1810-PDT

From: LEWIS at SRI-AI (Bil Lewis)

Subject: VALIS -- a personal review


        What ever else one might wish to say about VALIS, it

is most certainly autobiographical. Philip K Dick plays  the

major role,  and Doris  X, an  old friend  of mine,  is  the

number two figure (Sherri) through out the first half of the

book. I and various other friends appear as minor characters

or just in passing.  Several others I don't know at all. The

only event that I know to be inaccurate is that Doris didn't

die in her second bout with Cancer, which implies that  most

of the other weird things that occur are real.


        When I returned from the Peace Corps in 1974, I  met

"Phil" , a  friend of Doris'  who lived next  door, and  his

cat.  He struck me as  a depressed, moribund character  with

little interest in  people and none  in living, exactly  the

last type  of person  Doris needed  at that  time. I  didn't

realize that this was Dick and that he and Doris were lovers

until last week.


        VALIS is  not  so  much science  fiction  as  it  is

religious/mystic fiction  (however  much  of  it  really  is

fiction!). Dick writes very well. He uses a huge  vocabulary

makes innumerable literary references, and a fair number  of

personal ones too. Having read the  Bible, alot of SF &  all

of Dick's works  would certainly help  in understanding  the

book.  Knowing the people involved would also.


        The  book   is   angry,  confused,   neurotic,   and

brilliant, like Phil was.  He yearns for, and  half-believes

in, a mystic, quasi-religious reality where spiritual elites

exist and discover each other through subtle messages hidden

on TV  and in  movies. Age-old  conspiracies, "Others",  and

God-cum-human are an integral part of the universe. Just  as

we expect these things in SF, Dick proposes them to be real.


        Dick exposes himself as he is, he extols the mystic,

and bemoans  his  personal  loss of  the  two  girls  [sic].

Ironically Doris now bemoans HER  personal loss of two  men,

David (a grand mal  seizure), and now  Phil. Somehow I  find

all of this quite fitting, like closing a circle.


        I cannot recommend VALIS as  a book to read to  very

many people. Only  if you are  particulary intrigued by  the

questions posed above and posses  a fine sense of the  agony

of both  life  and love,  and  can empathize  with  a  man's

struggling would you enjoy reading this. [Robert, YOU  would

understand.]


        If you still  think of  great writers  as being  all

around  fantastic   people,   ones  that   are   conversant,

personable, and in control of their own lives (like I  did),

then avoid VALIS.  He leaves few emotional stones  unturned,

and they are real.


-Bil

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SFL ARCHIVES VOLUME 14 : FLOW MY TEARS & SCANNER DARKLY inspirations?

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Date: 22 Feb 89 23:21:14 GMT

From: jac@paul.rutgers.edu (J. A. Chandross)

Subject: PKD and the events of 1974/1975


In a wonderful piece of prose, maddoxt@novavax.UUCP (Thomas Maddox) writes:

> let me give you the following remarks on the difference between "android"

> and "human," written as the opening of an address Philip Dick intended to

> give at a conference in England in March, 1975.  He was ill and could not

> attend; his text was published in the collection, _Science Fiction at

> Large_, which also includes Thomas Disch's brilliant and infamous "The

> Embarrassments of Science Fiction."  (Edited by Peter Nicholls, the

> collection was published by Harper and Row in the United States in 1976;

> so far as I know, it is out of print.)

>

>As Dick makes clear, the distinction between "human" and "android" is not

>simple and does not simply refer to a being's manner of origin.


This essay was recently re-printed in _The Dark Haired Girl_ by PKD.  This

book is highly recommended for anyone with a weakness for dark haired

women.  Also included are a number of dicks essays and some correspondence.


PKD was not ill in the usual sense; he was very badly frightened.  In 1974

PKD's house was broken into by a para-military group.  During this robbery

his fire-proof safe was blown with mil-grade plastique and the contents,

including several stories, were stolen.  So was his stereo and, oddly

enough, all of his cancelled checks for the past ten years.  The police had

been warned by PKD about a possible break-in several days before the

incident, but PKD's pleas for help were largely ignored.  None of PKD's

belongings were ever recovered, and the police told PKD to back off, or an

accident might happen to him.  Soon after the break-in PKD began receiving

even more death threats than before.  One of them stated that if he went to

a convention in Canada that he would be killed.  PKD backed out at the last

minute, but did send off the Human vs Android address to be published in

the proceedings.  I believe that this is the convention that Maddox is

referring to.


For more information on the harassment of PKD see:

   _Only Apparently Real_       Paul Williams

      This is a set of interviews with PKD only days before he died.

   _The Dark Haired Girl_       PKD

      Collected non-fiction essays and correspondence of PKD.

   _Valis_                      PKD

      Fictionalized account of the events of 1974.  PKD's exegesis.


Jonathan A. Chandross

Internet: jac@paul.rutgers.edu

Uucp: rutgers!jac@paul.rutgers.edu

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Date: 22 Feb 89 20:35:56 GMT

From: llt@peregrine.peregrine.com (Taylor)

Subject: PKDS (Philip K. Dick Society)


In my infrequent excursions through this newsgroup, I invariably run across

several references to Phil Dick in one context or another.


Since there is an interest in Phil and his work, I thought you might like

some information about the Philip K. Dick Society and the newsletter that

it publishes quarterly. (Please forgive me if this information has been

posted before.)


The newsletter has been published for the last six years by the PKDS under

the direction of Paul Williams, author, friend, and literary executor of

Phil's estate. Consequently, the kind of information that appears in the

newsletter is extremely varied, often quirky, and very interesting. You

would think that, in the seven years since Phil's death, interest in him

and his work would have waned. Quite the contrary. It seems that the

interest is growing, the amount of writing about Phil and his work

continues to grow, and the body of his published work also grows under

Paul's direction.


A point in fact is the recent publication of a collection of letters, and

essays called The Dark Haired Girl. It's the first compilation that I am

aware of of Phil's real-life communication (of interest, perhaps in view of

the number of postings that I have run across on the subject of Phil Dick

and reality); in this case, the common theme of the writings is Phil's life

long search for the Dark-Haired Girl.


I was one of the Dark-Haired Girls that Phil encountered in that search;

the experience took place nearly 18 years ago, and was one that very

probably shaped the direction of my life. (But then, I think that anyone

who knew Phil would also say that about their own life.) The newsletter

provides a forum for people with their own experiences to talk about them;

there is also an astonishing amount of news about Phil's work and work that

others are doing that is related.


If you write to Paul Williams, he will send you information about the

newsletter; the address is:

   PKDS

   Box 611

   Glen Ellen, CA   95442.

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Date: 23 Feb 89 14:36:35 GMT

From: ELE@PSUVM.BITNET (Jeremy Crampton)

Subject: Re: PKD and the events of 1974/1975


jac@paul.rutgers.edu (J. A. Chandross) says:


>maddoxt@novavax.UUCP (Thomas Maddox) writes:

>> let me give you the following remarks on the difference between

>> "android" and "human," written as the opening of an address Philip Dick

>> intended to give at a conference in England in March, 1975.  He was ill

>> and could not attend; his text was published in the collection, _Science

>> Fiction at Large_, which also includes Thomas Disch's brilliant and

>> infamous "The Embarrassments of Science Fiction."  (Edited by Peter

>> Nicholls, the collection was published by Harper and Row in the United

>> States in 1976; so far as I know, it is out of print.)

>

>PKD was not ill in the usual sense; he was very badly frightened.  In 1974

>PKD's house was broken into by a para-military group.  During this robbery

>his fire-proof safe was blown with mil-grade plastique and the contents,

>including several stories, were stolen.  So was his stereo and, oddly

>enough, all of his cancelled checks for the past ten years.  The police

>had been warned by PKD

[stuff deleted]

>would be killed.  PKD backed out at the last minute, but did send off the

>Human vs Android address to be published in the proceedings.  I believe

>that this is the convention that Maddox is referring to.


You seem to be confusing two different events and time periods here.  The

"ill- ness" Thomas Maddox refers to occurred in 1975 (if memory serves, it

was something to do with his heart, according to Peter Nicholls' editorial

comments; he later died of a stroke of course) and prevented him from

flying over to England where Nicholls was presenting a series of sf

lectures including the Disch essay (btw, reread that last night- it's as

relevant today as it was then), LeGuin, Garner, Harrison etc at the

Institute for Contemporary Arts in London.  The talks were published as

_Explorations_of_the_Marvellous_ in the UK and _Science_Fiction_at_Large_

in the US.


As for the "para-military" group and the story you recount that follows

this statement, well.  You offer this with all the seeming certainty of

fact, which is precisely what we don't have here.  We have multiple

perspectives.  Read the introduction to _The_Dark_Haired_Girl_ where Paul

Williams writes of the problems of "the unreliable narrator" that PKD

certainly was (there's even a warning on the copyright page about this).


For instance, it is not generally acknowledged that PKD lived in an area

where drug dealers hung out.  It's my opinion that when his house was

broken into in the early 70s (around the time of Vancouver) it was actually

the police conducting a raid (he also noticed people watching him before

this I believe).  This would account for the "mil-grade plastique" as you

put it, as they looked through his safe, and, of course, why they took his

cancelled checks (to see what other dealers he may have been in contact

with if he *was* a dealer himself--he wasn't of course, thus the cover-up

later by presumably highly embarrassed police).  Paranoia is "infectious,"

he probably had it accentuated by the nearby dealers.


Perhaps the person who recently posted, who described herself as one of

PKD's dark-haired girls can tell us if she knows anything more about this?


These are just my opinions you understand and they're probably as invalid

as the next guy's, but I think it's better not to just uncritically accept

everything PKD said (he changed his mind so often anyway, as was ably shown

in Patricia Warrick's excellent _Mind_in_Motion_).  That statement applies

to the March 1974 events as well.  But you're certainly right to recommend

_The_Dark_Haired_Girl_; a real insightful book.


And anyway, let's not lose sight of what's really important: his brilliant

fiction.


Comments?

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Date: 24 Feb 89 02:39:55 GMT

From: jac@paul.rutgers.edu (J. A. Chandross)

Subject: Re: PKD and the events of 1974/1975


ELE@PSUVM.BITNET (Jeremy Crampton) writes:

> As for the "para-military" group and the story you recount that follows

> this statement, well.  You offer this with all the seeming certainty of

> fact, which is precisely what we don't have here.  We have multiple

> perspectives.  Read the introduction to _The_Dark_Haired_Girl_ where Paul

> Williams writes of the problems of "the unreliable narrator" that PKD

> certainly was (there's even a warning on the copyright page about this).


I have read the introduction.  PKD's description of the events of the

1970's were consistent with the narration in _Only Apparently Real_.  I

don't think a paranoid schizophrenic or even a very good (and very sane)

liar could fabricate such a reasonable sequence of events and keep the

delivery so consistent.  Liars get caught up by little things since the

universes they present are not self-consistent.  As far as diminished

mental capacity goes, check out a neuropsychology book if you want to look

at the reasoning processes and capacity of a schizophrenic. Not what you'd

call impressive.  PKD's description of the breaking fits the facts much too

well to be an outright fabrication.  And a little poetic license could not

have distorted reality enough to fit the facts.


Your joe average thief does not blow a fire-proof safe.  PKD came home and

found asbestos all over the place.  Furthermore, he found wet towels which

were used to muffle the fire burst (although PKD did not find this the

meaning of the towels for several years.)  This is the work of a

demolitions expert.  Finally, there were footprints in the asbestos of

military boots, clearly identified as such by their last.  It is very easy

to find plastique nowadays (thanks to the Soviets), but it was not quite so

easy in the early 70's.  You had to have some serious connections.


> It's my opinion that when his house was broken into in the early 70s

> (around the time of Vancouver) it was actually the police conducting a

> raid (he also noticed people watching him before this I believe).  This

> would account for the "mil-grade plastique" as you put it, as they looked

> through his safe, and, of course, why they took his cancelled checks (to

> see what other dealers he may have been in contact with if he *was* a

> dealer


This is not very likely.  What dealer writes a check?  And what supplier

*takes* a check.  While PKD had turned his house into a haven for drug

users (who also dealt), he was not a dealer or user himself.  It makes a

lot more sense that certain government groups were not amused by the

Aramchek references and might have decided to do a little checking up on

him.  Nixon had such operations initiated throughout his presidency.

Remember the plumbers?  They did the jobs that the CIA and FBI *refused* to

have anything to do with.  PKD personally believed that it was either a

neo-Nazi or Panther group (heavy emphasis on the Panthers).  I doubt that

we will ever know for sure, but I am inclined to believe his account,

Williams testimony to the contrary.


The man may have written fiction, but I know enough of how organizations

like the CIA work to believe him on this one.


Jonathan A. Chandross

Internet: jac@paul.rutgers.edu

Uucp: rutgers!jac@paul.rutgers.edu

------------------------------

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Date: 24 Feb 89 22:38:54 GMT

From: llt@peregrine.peregrine.com (Taylor)

Subject: Re: PKD and the events of 1974/1975


I don't yet know how to quote from an article, but to respond to Jonathan

Chandross and Jeremy Crampton and your postings regarding the break-in at

Phil's house and the introduction to the Dark-Haired Girl (of which I am

one -- can we just call me Linda, please?):


First of all, the dates here are somewhat wrong. When I met Phil in 1972,

the break-in was (and continued to be for years) a major topic of

conversation. It came up often. Some details were consistent, others were

mentioned only once or twice. The missing checks were in the first category

- -- in the second was the subject of grapes. I can't remember whether they

took grapes or left grapes but something about grapes and the break-in

wigged Phil out a lot.  Also, since I missed the original posting that

triggered this discussion, I don't know where the original poster heard

about this.  The break-in had taken place before I met him; my impression

was late sixties. I'm feeling like "If I'd known there was gonna be a test

I would have listened better."


My impression at the time was that something clearly happened. But how much

of this story has been embellished over time is not clear.


But I do have some personal experience of Phil taking something that had

the potential to be major and blowing it entirely out of proportion.


For example, in 1972 I lived down the street from Phil. We all had

apartments close to Cal State Fullerton. (When I say "we all" I refer to

Phil and Tim Powers and others you will know if you read The Dark- Haired

Girl; Jim Blaylock and K.W. Jeter were friends of Tim's and later, Phil's,

although they did not live in our area.


One day I received notification from my landlord that the place was going

to be fumigated, we should remove everything from the cupboards, pull

drawers and their contents out and cover everything up. Then, we were to

vacate the premises for several hours.


I went over to Phil's and hung out; at the appointed hour I returned to my

apartment. When I got there, I saw that, much to my horror, they had also

pulled the drawers out of my dresser, and the top one, placed front and

center on my bed had a "lid" in it. I figured I was busted for sure, and

called Phil, looking for reassurance and possibly help. I think that, in

reality, I wasn't too scared, but, since Phil thrived on crisis, those of

us who were able to deliver crises were richly rewarded. This time was no

exception.


In no time at all, Phil had created a plan to thwart the narcs and confound

the police. It had to do with going to nearly every Carl's Junior in Orange

County and buying something, the end purpose was to have Carl's Junior bags

from so many locations that tracing the original purchaser would be nearly

impossible.  Then, we would put a little bit of the marijuana in each bag.

Then, we would all take as many cars as possible, each containing Carl's

Junior bags with little stashes in them and fan out, depositing Carl's

Junior bags in Dumpsters and trash cans all over Orange County. I loved

this plan, I thought it was hilarious.  Phil, however, was dead serious. He

wanted to put this plan into action. He couldn't let go of it. He analyzed

it and analyzed it and came close to convincing me, at least, that this was

only a step away from our own break-ins; almost certainly we were now under

surveillance. Phil would look out the window and point out the "undercover"

cars that were out there, only minutes away from breaking through the door.


Yes, please do read the introduction to The Dark-Haired Girl, and believe

Paul when he says that Phil is an unreliable narrator. I do not mean to

give the impression of belittling Phil and his enormously important

contributions. I was then, and am now, in complete awe of his genius. I

have yet to have an experience that comes close to discussions (about

anything) that took place with Phil, whether it was just the two of us or a

roomful of people.  But, yes, for Phil, reality was distorted. I'm sorry,

but that's the way it was.


I've written a response to the material that appeared about me in The Dark

Haired Girl at Paul Williams' invitation. In it, I explore my experience of

this subject in more depth, and relate more events. As of this writing,

Paul was considering publishing it in the PKDS newsletter. In his words, he

feels that it will be a breakthrough for people to read about this side of

Phil.  Specifically, what triggered my response was Paul's comment in the

introduction to TDHG that Phil was mad as a hatter, with aplogies to Tim.

Tim remains a staunch defender of Phil (or should I say to his image of

Phil). But, enough of that for now.  Read the newsletter.


By the way, Jonathan, where did you hear that "PKD had turned his house

into a haven for drug users?" I'm not denying this, because I don't know,

it's just that I keep learning more and more, and bits and pieces get

filled in here and there; I don't want to accept all information

indiscriminately without checking it out first.


And anyway, to paraphrase Jeremy, "...let's not lose sight of what's really

important: his brilliant writing."

------------------------------

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Date: 28 Feb 89 01:28:29 GMT

From: llt@peregrine.peregrine.com (Taylor)

Subject: Re: PKD and the events of 1974/1975


Boy am I amazed at how quickly apocrypha has descended upon us. What's

amazing about the subject of the break-in of Phil's house is that it is as

least as apocryphal now as it was at the time! (As far as speculation and

ever-changing.)


I ran across the following in the second issue of the PKDS newsletter.  Tim

Powers had provided some random musings which included this:


..."Sitting around in the living room...over many a jug of cheap Chianti,

Phil used to tell me about his days in Marin County...  and of course,

endless retellings and speculations about the time his house in San Rafael

was so spectacularly broken into in 1971.  Here are a couple of details on

that subject that may not have been published anywhere: all *open* cans or

packages, and all perishable food, were taken away, almost as though the

intruders knew of some contamination the food might have been exposed to;

Phil's car had been monkeyed with so that it wouldn't drive, but he

managed, impelled by a feeling of impending disaster, to get it to

move...he got a few miles away before it stopped for good (it was emitting

clouds of black smoke by this time, he said), and he stayed away from his

house all day...  he returned at night in a cab, and though the driver went

up to the house with him, the man fled when he saw the evidences of the

break-in, and refused to call the police.


"As I'd listen to Phil tell all these stories, I'd become certain that the

authorities must still be keeping any eye on him, and probably had the

apartment bugged, and therefore knew that *I* had heard all these secrets.

I was always expecting to be shot, or grabbed and taken away to some secret

prison camp in the mountains, as I left his place.  And Phil had recently

bought the Stones album "Sticky Fingers" and it was always playing in the

background, and I still can't hear "Sister Morphine" or "Moonlight Mile"

without instantly being back in that living room, me pouched in an old

brown vinyl beanbag chair, and Phil on the couch, the bottle on the table

between us, Phil frowning as he decided how much of some awful story he

dared reveal to me ("and if I told you the rest of it, Powers, you'd go

crazy.") and me nervously gulping wine and glancing at the window, afraid

I'd see a huge, diseased alien face peering in."


Phil was a wonderful storyteller, as all of us know, that being the common

thread among those of us communicating here. And his paranoia was powerful

and contagious. I also was convinced that, if indeed, his house had been

broken into by subversive groups, or worse, the government, then I too, by

association, was probably in big trouble. There was no doubt (at least not

much) that Phil's house had been broken into. But none of us had any way of

knowing how much of the details had been, well, embellished, to fit the

theory. Again, will someone let me know where the original information

about this came from?


Linda

llt@Peregrine.COM

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