Philip K. Dick, in his own words, a portrait from late 1952, early 1953

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In my researches of the public domain short stories, novelettes, and novellas of Philip K. Dick I’ve just discovered this wonderful, sad, and surprising self-portrait by Philip K. Dick. It appeared as the inside front cover of Imagination’s February 1953 issue (which would have been when Dick was about 24 years old).

In it he talks about his early origins as an Science Fiction reader, paints a picture of himself as a misunderstood fan of scientificition (which he abbreviates as “stf”), and as a person who dreams of one day seeing SF magazines in public libraries (and school libraries). To me that’s the really sad part. Heinlein can dream of seeing a man on the moon and see that achieved in his own lifetime. But I’ve yet to see a public library, let alone a school library, with a regular subscription to any SF magazine.

On the bright side of things we learn that his cat, at the time, was named “Magnificat” – and that’s pretty damned awesome.

Here’s the scan:

Introducing The Author: Philip K. Dick - from the February 1953 issue of Imagination

And here is the complete text:

Once, when I was very young, I came across a magazine directly below the comic books called STIRRING SCIENCE STORIES. I bought it, finally, and carried it home, reading it along the way. Here were ideas, vital and imaginative. Men moving across the universe, down into sub-atomic particles, into time: there was no limit. One society, one given environment was transcended. Stf was Faustian; it carried a person up and beyond.

I was twelve years old, then. But I saw in stf the same thing I see now: a medium in which the full play of human imagination can operate, ordered, of course, by reason and consistent development. Over the years stf has grown, matured toward greater social awareness and responsibility.

I became interested in writing stf when I saw it emerge from the ray gun stage into studies of man in various types and complexities of society.

I enjoy writing stf; it is essentially communication between myself and others as interested as I in knowing where present forces are taking us. My wife and my cat Magnificat, are a little worried about my preoccupation with stf. Like most stf readers I have files and stacks of magazines, boxes of notes and data. parts of unfinished stories, a huge desk full of related material in various stages. The neighbors say I seem to “read and write a lot”. But I think we will see our devotion pay off. We may yet live to be present when the public libraries begin to carry the stf magazines, and someday, perhaps, even the school libraries.
-Philip K. Dick

Posted by Jesse Willis

SFFaudio is 9 years old

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SFFaudio is 9 years old today. Please return for another day of service tomorrow, and the following ninety-nine-thousand tomorrows.*

Birthday Zone - SFFaudio - Orbiting since March 31, 2003

Posted by Jesse Willis

*as noted at the local planning office, on Alpha Centauri, we will be moving shortly before Earth’s demolition in 2053. You may then find us at our new location on Leda, orbiting Cygnus.

Gregg Margarite of LibriVox, Iambik Audio, The Drama Pod, and SFFaudio has died

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SFFaudio MetaI’ve just heard that Gregg Margarite, my good friend, and a friend to humanity, has died.

Here are the facts as I’ve been told them.

Gregg died of a sudden heart attack on Friday morning (March 23, 2012).

__

I’ve never used an emoticon in a post on SFFaudio. Emoticons, I thought, were for when words couldn’t be easily employed. And I figured that was never.

I was wrong.

If there ever was a day for a frowny face that day is this day.

:(

I became a friend of Gregg’s after listening to his recordings on LibriVox. I said to him that I wanted to be his friend because he was narrating so many of the audiobooks that I wanted to listen to. I told him that meant we had to be friends. And he believed me. And so we were.

We did several podcasts with Gregg. All of them were really fun. And, we were planning more. My last communication with him was about Philip K. Dick’s The Short Happy Life Of The Brown Oxford – which he wanted to narrate. Gregg wrote:

“I have 3 holy grails when it comes to PKD short stories, Brown Oxford, Electric Ant (not gonna happen in my lifetime) and Not By Its Cover.”

I was also waiting to hear his thoughts on the first episode of Black Mirror. I know he got it, but I don’t know if he saw it. I guess I’ll never know.

I told Gregg I had started listening to his narration of the novel Couch by Benjamin Parzybok. He asked that I tell him about it after listening. I won’t get that chance now.

Gregg was also planning on narrating The Ganymede Takeover, a novel by Philip K. Dick and Ray Nelson. I don’t think he’d actually started it yet though as I hadn’t yet sent him my copy.

The last update on Gregg’s site says that he’d recorded 205 hours, 58 minutes, and 30 seconds of audiobooks. Most of that was for LibriVox. I figure that’s one hell of a legacy.

In the many times we spoke I learned many surprising things about Gregg. He said he used to build “surrogate penises for Ronald Regan”, he was a musician, he was an artist and he was a fiction writer too (but under pseudonyms). I never learned his pseudonyms.

Gregg’s website, Acoustic Pulp, offers no comments section. So I invite anybody wishing to communicate any kind thoughts with Janine, Gregg’s wife, to comment below.

Update:
Mark Nelson has started a LibriVox forum thread.

Posted by Jesse Willis