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VALIS Trilogy #1-3

The Valis Trilogy: The Complete Collection of Philip K. Dick's Award-Winning VALIS Series

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This e-book only edition brings together the three novels of Philip K. Dick's VALIS trilogy. VALIS What is VALIS? This question is at the heart of Philip K. Dick’s groundbreaking novel, the first book in his defining trilogy. When a beam of pink light begins giving a schizophrenic man named Horselover Fat (who just might also be known as Philip K. Dick) visions of an alternate Earth where the Roman Empire still reigns, he must decide whether he is crazy, or whether a godlike entity is showing him the true nature of the world. The Divine Invasion God is not dead, he has merely been exiled to an extraterrestrial planet. And it is on this planet that God meets Herb Asher and convinces him to help retake Earth from the demonic Belial. As the middlie novel of Dick's VALIS trilogy, The Divine Invasion plays a pivotal role in answering the questions raised by the first novel, expanding that world while exploring just how much anyone can really know -- even God himself. The Transmigration of Timothy Archer The final book in the VALIS trilogy, The Transmigration of Timothy Archer brings the author’s search for the identity and nature of God to a close. The novel follows Bishop Timothy Archer as he travels to Israel, ostensibly to examine ancient scrolls bearing the words of Christ. But, more importantly, this leads him to examine the decisions he made during his life and how they may have contributed to the suicide of his mistress and son.

787 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 1990

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About the author

Philip K. Dick

2,005 books22.4k followers
Philip Kindred Dick was a prolific American science fiction author whose work has had a lasting impact on literature, cinema, and popular culture. Known for his imaginative narratives and profound philosophical themes, Dick explored the nature of reality, the boundaries of human identity, and the impact of technology and authoritarianism on society. His stories often blurred the line between the real and the artificial, challenging readers to question their perceptions and beliefs.
Raised in California, Dick began writing professionally in the early 1950s, publishing short stories in various science fiction magazines. He quickly developed a distinctive voice within the genre, marked by a fusion of science fiction concepts with deep existential and psychological inquiry. Over his career, he authored 44 novels and more than 100 short stories, many of which have become classics in the field.
Recurring themes in Dick's work include alternate realities, simulations, corporate and government control, mental illness, and the nature of consciousness. His protagonists are frequently everyday individuals—often paranoid, uncertain, or troubled—caught in surreal and often dangerous circumstances that force them to question their environment and themselves. Works such as Ubik, The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch, and A Scanner Darkly reflect his fascination with perception and altered states of consciousness, often drawing from his own experiences with mental health struggles and drug use.
One of Dick’s most influential novels is Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?, which served as the basis for Ridley Scott’s iconic film Blade Runner. The novel deals with the distinction between humans and artificial beings and asks profound questions about empathy, identity, and what it means to be alive. Other adaptations of his work include Total Recall, Minority Report, A Scanner Darkly, and The Man in the High Castle, each reflecting key elements of his storytelling—uncertain realities, oppressive systems, and the search for truth. These adaptations have introduced his complex ideas to audiences well beyond the traditional readership of science fiction.
In the 1970s, Dick underwent a series of visionary and mystical experiences that had a significant influence on his later writings. He described receiving profound knowledge from an external, possibly divine, source and documented these events extensively in what became known as The Exegesis, a massive and often fragmented journal. These experiences inspired his later novels, most notably the VALIS trilogy, which mixes autobiography, theology, and metaphysics in a narrative that defies conventional structure and genre boundaries.
Throughout his life, Dick faced financial instability, health issues, and periods of personal turmoil, yet he remained a dedicated and relentless writer. Despite limited commercial success during his lifetime, his reputation grew steadily, and he came to be regarded as one of the most original voices in speculative fiction. His work has been celebrated for its ability to fuse philosophical depth with gripping storytelling and has influenced not only science fiction writers but also philosophers, filmmakers, and futurists.
Dick’s legacy continues to thrive in both literary and cinematic spheres. The themes he explored remain urgently relevant in the modern world, particularly as technology increasingly intersects with human identity and governance. The Philip K. Dick Award, named in his honor, is presented annually to distinguished works of science fiction published in paperback original form in the United States. His writings have also inspired television series, academic studies, and countless homages across media.
Through his vivid imagination and unflinching inquiry into the nature of existence, Philip K. Dick redefined what science fiction could achieve. His work continues to challenge and inspire, offering timeless insights into the human condition a

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 62 reviews
Profile Image for Mircalla.
656 reviews99 followers
February 23, 2020
Philip K. Dick - uno e trino


All’inizio degli anni settanta Philip K. Dick attraversò un periodo assai turbolento, anche per i canoni del suo stile di vita caotico, l’intrusione in casa sua ad opera di sconosciuti, un divorzio ed un certo numero di relazioni problematiche, ed infine un tentativo di suicidio.
Ma l’evento attorno a cui ruota la trilogia di Valis e, gran parte della vita di Dick, è l’esperienza di conversione che egli racconta di aver avuto ad opera di un raggio rosa, che nel marzo 74 salvò la vita di suo figlio da un male non diagnosticato dai medici.
Ora, stando alla fedele cronaca dei fatti tenuta da Sutin nel suo Divine invasioni – la vita di Philip k. Dick - non sapremo mai cosa è realmente accaduto in quei giorni, ma Valis è la versione che ne dà Dick.
La trilogia di Valis rappresenta l’apice dell’espressione letteraria di Dick, nonché il suo personale zibaldone metafisico. L’interpretazione che egli cerca di dare delle sue esperienze di vita, con una lucidità che finora era stato ben lungi dal raggiungere, gli varranno quel romanzo definitivo che per tutta la vita aveva sognato di scrivere e che aveva finora solo sfiorato con Un oscuro scrutare.
Valis inizia come un romanzo realistico, con i personaggi che cercano di dare una spiegazione della faccenda del raggio rosa.
“ Io sono Horselver Fat e sto scrivendo in terza persona per amore di obiettività” ci dice Dick, e in effetti i personaggi del romanzo Fat, Philip Dick, Kevin e David non sono che elementi della realtà dello scrittore.
Kevin rappresenta lo scrittore K.W. Jeter, David è Tim Powers, quanto a Fat e Dick sono le due parti dell’autore che per tutta la sua vita si sono alternate nel controllo della sua personalità, da una parte lo scrittore di fantascienza affermato, con il problema della definizione di realtà e dall’altra il lucido critico dell’America di quei giorni.
Ma dal capitolo 9 improvvisamente veniamo catapultati nel romanzo di fantascienza. I protagonisti vanno al cinema e il film segna il punto di rottura nel libro. I quattro si spostano nella contea di Sonoma per incontrare gli autori del film e con loro una bambina. Inquietante metafora della divinità, la bambina dirà loro delle cose che porteranno alla definizione di una religiosità tutt’altro che comune.
La parte più toccante dell’intero romanzo è quella sulla ricerca, di una spiegazione, o di una vita che valga la pena di essere vissuta. Insomma puro Dick., le sue inquietudini, più attuali che mai, saltano fuori dalla pagina scritta per ancorarsi nel pensiero del lettore e là soggiornare a lungo.

Divina invasione, a mio avviso il più completo dei tre, è il romanzo in cui il cinismo metafisico dell’autore giunge a compimento. Un dio alieno affida il proprio figlio ad una coppia di terrestri affinché Belial, che regna incontrastato sulla Terra, venga sconfitto. Le continue digressioni metafisiche ci danno la misura del lavoro che c’è dietro questo splendido romanzo. Mai finora Dick era riuscito così bene a coniugare le sue angosce col problema del concetto di realtà.
Non sempre si riesce a definire con chiarezza quel che si intuisce dietro la metafora, ma la forza di alcune immagini resta il punto di riscatto di una mente votata alla comprensione della realtà dietro il velo…

La trasmigrazione di Timothy Archer è invece il racconto della passione di Dick per il vescovo Pike, qui raffigurato in maniera impietosa, come un dissoluto manipolatore con un enorme ascendente, ben sfruttato, sulle menti dei suoi adepti. La narratrice Angel Archer rappresenta la mente lucida che sola può controbilanciare i deliri metafisici del reverendo. Lucidità che le salverà la vita quando le impedirà di seguire Archer nella sua estrema ricerca, raccontata con cinismo ed ironia; quasi a voler dire che a furia di passare la vita a speculare sulla natura della realtà non ci si accorge dei bisogni più elementari…” tu non sei malata, sei affamata, è la fame che ti sta uccidendo…quando qualcuno viene qui a sentirmi parlare, io gli offro un sandwich. Gli stupidi ascoltano le mie parole, i saggi mangiano il sandwich…”A parlare è l’insegnante di sufismo che paradossalmente conclude la ricerca di Angel con quello che potrebbe essere il messaggio di un Dick finalmente pacificato dopo anni di tentativi “il nostro corpo, e i corpi del resto dell’umanità, attendono di essere nutriti. Concretamente. Materialmente. Con amore.”
Profile Image for Monia Marchettini.
13 reviews12 followers
June 27, 2024
Termino questo libro estasiata, ma con la certezza di non aver capito niente. Cosa ho letto? Dove ho preso irrimediabilmente il punto che spiegava tutto? Il punto è che se non avete capito è che non vi siete svegliati? Forse non avete visto la luce rosa... oppure non avete ascoltato Fidelio? La vita è vostra, prendete sempre le medicine e portare pazienza.
Profile Image for Adam.
Author 3 books16 followers
May 5, 2022
VALIS: 5 stars. This book was incredible. I really felt like I made a friend in Philip K. Dick. He spoke to my soul in this one. Should have stopped here.
The Divine Invasion: 1 star. Nothing to grasp onto while meandering through void.
The Transmigration of Timothy Archer: 3 stars. Started very strong and I began to sing his praises again to whomever would listen. However, this was temporary, as the book plunged into a lagoon of randomness. I usually love impulsive stream of consciousness prose, but this third installment of Dick was spread too thin--too many things simultaneously happening and not happening.
50 reviews
November 2, 2020
PKD did a lot of drugs in his life. I feel that’s the only way to start a review of “Valis”, a semi-autobiographical novel about his experience with a pink beam of light that struck him in February 1974. Was it really a divine communication from a cosmic deity as suggested in the book? And as ostensibly PKD believed in real life. Or was it just the effects of so many years of drug abuse on his body and mind?

The author himself seems to struggle with answering this question in the book. So much that he splits himself into two people- the first-person narrator who is Phillip, and a third person named “Horselover Fat (the Greek meaning of Phillip and German meaning of Dick). Fat is the one who had the experience with the beam of light and is a separate person from PKD as the narrator that he does not know what Fat is always thinking. Even though they are the same person. In the beginning, the first-person narrator sometimes mistakenly switches to Fat as first person but by the end they are two distinct people. Fat even takes a trip without Phillip, a seemingly impossible things as they are the same person.

The book is plutonium dense in explorations of religion, philosophy, theology and how they relate to the physical and perceived world. Though it reads more like the accounts of a madman who read too many books with ideas he could not piece together, rather than deep insightful look at the world. A minimal plot and characters are thrown in, undoubtedly based on real people and events in the author’s life, but they are not enough to hold the book together. And they felt very artificial in the story, like the author threw them in to fill the time between the rambling ideas of his Exegesis. It is a shame PKD couldn’t collect his ideas better to make a cohesive story or revelations. It feels like they are just there on the surface, poking through some rubbery membrane, not able to escape.

The empire is not dead.
Profile Image for Warren Tutwiler.
156 reviews1 follower
January 5, 2025
The last three (completed) novels of Philip K Dick's life. The first two, VALIS and The Divine Invasion, are complementary and very good, though it helps immensely to know something of his personal history to fully appreciate them, as they (particularly VALIS) are somewhat autobiographical, albeit fictionalized. The third, The Transmigration of Timothy Archer, while also being semi-autobiographical in the sense that it is based on his experiences with the late bishop James Pike, is not at all like the other two, and in fact only vaguely touches on the same subject matter in one or two paragraphs near the end of the novel. Rather, it is much more akin to his other "straight" fiction/literature novels (such as Confessions of a Crap Artist), with their despicable characters and not-particularly-interesting plot lines. I do not believe it should be considered part of a "trilogy", but instead one should read Radio Free Albemuth alongside the first two in this collection. Transmigration is often praised as being Dick's best characterization of a female character, but upon re-reading it, I hear Dick's voice coming from the female lead more so than someone independent and original.
Profile Image for Luca Parisi.
21 reviews
September 16, 2025
"Dio esiste? E se esiste, che forma assume?"

Questa è la domanda che funge da collegamento per i tre romanzi presenti in questa raccolta, tre storie che non hanno altro collegamento se non la tematica.

La risposta alla prima domanda è indubbiamente un SÌ: e ad esserci sembra essere un Dio cristiano/gnostico. Tuttavia, esso non ha forme riconosciute dalla chiesa: assume forma di pura conoscenza (Valis), una forma umana (Divina Invasione), o in forma dello Spirito Santo attraverso l'assunzione di funghi (Trasmigrazione). La chiesa a sua volta è una forza limitata e bugiarda, anche se per la sua stessa ignoranza, ignora ad esempio di seguire Belial, il diavolo stesso; oppure insegna dottrine che non vengono tramandate da Gesù Cristo, ma da i sacerdoti zadochiti.

Molto interessante è l'immaginazione di Dick. Vediamo la commistione tra i generi teologico e fantascientifico, tant'è che alcune storie potrebbero essere davvero descritte come "Un ipotetico sequel del nuovo testamento riscritto in chiave futuristica". Mi viene da pensare quanto credesse Dick a ciò che scrivevo, in quanto soprattutto la prima storia (Valis) sembra essere molto autobiografica.

La mia tesi del libro come "sequel del nuovo testamento" è avvalorata dalle numerosissime citazioni bibliche e non presenti in tutti e 3 i romanzi. Citazioni che però rendono l'opera di difficile interpretazione, dal momento che chi legge (io) non è un esperto né di letteratura inglese né tantomeno di teologia.

Un aspetto che mi ha leggermente deluso è il fatto che pensavo che le storie fossero profondamente interconnesse; mi sbagliavo. inoltre, sebbene abbia apprezzato "Divine Invasioni", l'ho trovato incompleto, una ricerca del climax che non trova mai il suo culmine. la mia interpretazione è che, essendo Dick un comune mortale, non potesse conoscere l'esito dell'eterna lotta tra bene e male, noto soltanto a Dio. Anche "Valis" mi era sembrato incompleto, ma "Divina Invasione" sembra essere una sorta di seguito ambientato secoli dopo.

P.S. forse l'incompletezza è data proprio dal fatto di voler rendere l'opera una sorta di vangelo: il vangelo stesso si chiude con un finale aperto in cui Gesù promette di tornare un ultima volta sulla terra. Quindi anche queste opere devono avere un finale aperto.
97 reviews4 followers
December 1, 2024
VALIS – The Divine Invasion – The Transmigration of Timothy Archer

With the exception of the second book, this is not your usual science-fiction fare. But then again, given Philip K. Dick’s obsession with the blurred line between reality and unreality, for him it probably was.

Discussions and reviews and synopses are abundant. My own summary of the trilogy is that it’s united more by concepts than any clear overarching story. It’s what you get when a cocktail of sci-fiction, gnostic speculation and mental illness (with a garnish of drugs) is filtered through the author’s own personal religious experiences and inquiries.

The first book in the series is quite transparent: ‘Horselover Fat’ (surely the worst of all possible pseudonyms) is struck by a beam of pink light that he believes is a theophany (but nevertheless names ‘Zebra’). Fat soon finds himself deeply mired in a cosmic conspiracy patterned on ancient gnostic redeemer myths in which salvation is basically a matter of ‘gnosis’ (knowledge) effecting a reversal of our spiritual/cosmic amnesia as to the true state of the world and our place in it. In Dick’s rendition, however, the world as we experience it is nothing but information, and what we conceive of as objects and change are nothing more than this information being crunched. In fact, we are really the thoughts of God, except that God (or part of God) has gone mad and the world, without knowing it, is under the pall of an evil age, the Roman empire which never ended.

Thankfully God knows he/she/it is mad, and constructs a saviour known to different ages by different names: Dionysus, Elijah, Jesus. This saviour, the Immortal One, takes the physical form of information (‘plasmate’) kept hidden for centuries in the Nag Hammadi codices until finally rediscovered and viewed, at which point the plasmate cross-bonds with humans resulting in a redeemed race of ‘homoplasmate’. In previous times and religious frameworks this was termed being “born from above” or “born of the Spirit” with the resulting hologrammatic universe termed the “kingdom of God”. All good Sunday morning stuff.

What got me reading the trilogy in the first place was a podcast in which religion scholar Jeffrey Kripal was asked if he read any fiction. Not much, he replied, with the exception of Dick’s ‘exegesis’ or ‘Cryptica Scriptura’. Like some sports drink powder, the exegesis contains the novel’s gnostic ideas and concepts in concentrate form. The novel itself is really exegesis with water added, stirred well.

(I had to add this. Somewhat at odds with the thetical nature of the exegesis, the penultimate thesis takes the form of a biblical nature psalm (e.g., Ps. 104) written by no less than Ikhnaton, the Immortal One from the star system Sirius, from whom is descended a race of 3-eyed creatures with crab like pincers, guardians of the saving gnosis passed from Ikhnaton to Moses to Elijah to Jesus, and eventually to Horselover Fat via a beam of pink light).

It’s probably been said countless times that the VALIS trilogy is ideas rather than plot driven. And that is true. Although the story line does pick up at times, I can’t deny at times struggling through the esoteric mosh pit that is the mind of the author.

The second novel (The Divine Invasion) continues the same mythos, but is set in the future, is partly off-world, and shares practically no characters or storylines from VALIS. At least it has more of a plot, featuring Elias Tate (the biblical Elijah) and Emmanuel (the biblical son of ‘Yah’, creator of the universe). Unfortunately the world is under the dominion Belial (although in an alternate universe Belial is stuck inside a goat) and the Emmanuel is a six-year old with amnesia. Oh yes, there is also an A.I system called ‘Big Noodle’ (owned by neither Google nor Facebook nor Microsoft).

The third novel (The Transmigration of Timothy Archer) is entirely this world again. But apart from Bishop Timothy Archer’s obsession with some gnostic scroll fragments, it has even less connection with the first two novels. Even the religious ideas focus more on traditional Christian and Buddhist concepts. All the other aspects of Timothy Archer’s highly controversial incumbency – his heretical views, the suicide of his son and later his mistress, his drug use, his seances, his untimely death in the Judean wilderness – is a barely veiled biography of radical and real-life Episcopalian bishop James Pike – with whom Dick was friends.

Given the first novel is about the author and the final one about his friend, the trilogy is very much the mind and religious travails of Philip K. Dick on a platter.

I offer only one or two reflections. As fanciful (batshit crazy?) as it is, Dick really did ‘read, mark, learn and inwardly digest’ the religious, theological and philosophical ideas which he married to science fiction concepts, resulting in three very unusual children. The list of prominent religious figures and philosophical illuminati is impressive; even more so that Dick really engaged with this at a deeply personal and existential level. For this reason alone I will probably read the series again, but not for a while.

Yet for all the speculative profusion, for all the exploration of religious ideas, one can’t say it was a novel of spiritual depth. I say this from the perspective that perennial wisdom can be attained in any of the world’s religions or spiritual traditions, but I didn’t find that here. I think, perhaps, there was too much turmoil going on in the author’s mind to find the depth or the 'beyond' he was looking for.
Profile Image for Hex75.
986 reviews60 followers
August 16, 2017
per molti anni dopo averlo comprato (per completismo dickiano e perchè costava usata assai poco) sono stato restio ad iniziare questa trilogia: in parte perchè non reggo trilogie e saghe, in parte per la fama di apice folle e "difficile" della produzione di dick. poi dopo averlo iniziato mi son trovato a divorarlo, pagina dopo pagina, libro dopo libro. fantascienza? no, qui la fantascienza è solo una scusa, in "valis" -il primo dei tre libri- c'è ad esempio più la più seria descrizione della schizofrenia che mi sia mai capitato di trovare in un libro, tutta retta dal protagonista, "divina invasione" sembra più giocare con i luoghi comuni della fantascienza per parlare d'altro (di religione, come in tutti i e tre libri), mentre "la trasmigrazione di timothy archer" è semplicemente un romanzo "serio", che a tratti -sto delirando?- ha ricordato quasi un don de lillo. folle? non so: dick non mi è mai parso tanto lucido quanto nelle parti dedicate alle malattie (sia mentali che fisiche), alle relazioni umane (si parla, e tanto, di amore e di affetto reciproco, di morte e delle nostre reazioni ad essa) e si senta che l'ansia religiosa è una ricerca "seria", non il delirio di un folle che si è messo in cerca di dio tra trattati e libri sacri. e se forse dick era così nella vita reale il romanziere in qualche modo è riuscito in qualche modo a tenere soto controllo le ossessioni quel tanto da non sommergere il romanzo. non tutto gira nel verso giusto -il finale di "divina invasione" ad esempio è fin troppo frettoloso nel chiudersi. come se dovesse per forza arrivare lo scontro che stavamo aspettando per poi chiuderlo in breve e chiudere il romanzo- ma nella sua totalità è un gioiello.
192 reviews1 follower
January 1, 2022
"Trilogia di Valis", Philip K. Dick, 1981-1982.

Questo volume contiene gli ultimi tre libri scritti da Dick, di cui l'ultimo pubblicato postumo.

In "Valis", vi è il racconto di una vera esperienza accaduta all'autore.
Tra il febbraio ed il marzo del 1974, infatti, Dick iniziò a sentire voci ed avere visioni.
Riteneva di essere stato colpito da un fascio di luce che lo avrebbe messo in contatto con una Entità primordiale.
Da ciò nacque "Esegesi", una sterminata raccolta di appunti a carattere telogico-filosifico, da cui venne tratta la Trilogia in esame.
Valis, dunque, cosa è?
Una imperscrutabile "entità intelligente che vive nello spazio?" Una formula? Un vero e proprio essere che impregna di sé l'intero universo?
Chissà...

In "Divina invasione", un Dio ormai dimenticato manda sulla terra suo Figlio, anche se privo di memoria.

Ne "La trasmigrazione di Timothy Archer", attraverso il resconto della vita dissoluta del vescovo Archer, parteciperemo alla costante ricerca delle Verità ultime e della possibile rivelazione di un fatto sconvolgente che riguarda la figura di Gesù Cristo.

Tre libri dalle trame completamente diverse, che è possibile leggere partendo da dove si vuole, ma che presentano "assonanze tematiche" evidentissime: la visione mistica di Dick; speculazioni sulle fondamenta stesse di cristianesimo ed ebraismo, passando per analisi dettagliate dei miti e delle leggende delle più grandi religioni; collegamenti diretti con il neoplatonismo e lo gnosticismo.
Leggerli, insomma, non è una passeggiata.
Ma è tremendamente interessante.

Consigliati.

"(...) e io pensavo di sapere perché siamo su questa terra: per scoprire che ciò che ami di più ti verrà rubato, probabilmente più per un errore nelle alte sfere che per un preciso disegno."
Profile Image for Evan Snyder.
207 reviews18 followers
June 13, 2018
I slogged through the first book of the trilogy (VALIS) so I'm calling it "read" instead of "abandoned," but I'm stopping there, at least for now.

While a bit of a tortured read, I find Philip K. Dick's life story, partially captured in this fictionalized autobiography, quite fascinating. I was first introduced to the man behind the sci-fi in an Imaginary Worlds episode: https://www.imaginaryworldspodcast.or.... To cut to the chase, towards the end of his life, he started hearing voices, sometimes eerily prescient voices. As Imaginary Worlds describes it, trying to determine the source of the voices had Dick questioning everything, including the integrity of his own mind and the source of inspiration for his past writing. His visions and paranoia so evoke his writings that you can't help but wonder if he drove himself mad with his own creations, or his latent madness enabled him to create them in the first place.

In VALIS, we get a sensationalized version of PKD's view on all that. The book is told from his point of view, and describes his own interaction with his split personality persona, Horselover Fat. His awareness of this dissociation comes in and out of focus at different points. Perhaps knowing some of the true story ahead of time ruined the suspense and revelation for me, and contributed to my relative boredom in the book. While he touched many of his classic themes (religion, conspiracy, surveillance, AI), he lacked the focus and climax of other stories, and devolved into ramblings instead.
16 reviews1 follower
May 3, 2009
Life is too short for tedious "is he insane, or is he speaking to God" novels. Maybe a shot of psychedelic drugs would have helped.
Profile Image for ktulu81.
114 reviews10 followers
September 26, 2017
-La realtà è quella che quando uno smette di crederci non sparisce-
Le riflessioni di una mente geniale e disturbata allo stesso tempo sulla natura ultima della realtà.
Profile Image for Martin.
18 reviews
October 28, 2020
I am a longtime fan of Philip Dick. I have read most of his novels, some more than once. I had read parts of the VALIS Trilogy 30 or 40 years ago and thought I would read all of them in one go. These are not typical Philip Dick Science Fiction Stories. They are a lot more like A Scanner Darkly, which is about an undercover policeman in some future time and is very good.

This trilogy totters on the edge of SciFi and not. The first story is very typical of Philip Dick. VALIS stands for Vast Active Living Intelligent System. It is the thread that ties the first two in this trilogy together. In these two novels, Dick explores some big ideas by building a new reality around them.

The third one is a bit of a stretch. VALIS is only mentioned in passing in the "Timothy Archer" novel. I had a hard time finishing that one, but I was determined. Too much of the novel got lost in the loops in his characters minds. While I enjoy the big issues that usually run through Philip Dick's novels, this one felt tedious.

Re-reading these was interesting. I didn't remember much of any of them, so it was like reading them anew. At some points, I don't know how my younger self grasped what was in the novels, or if I fully understood them. I also wondered how they affected my young and formative mind. But, I digress. These three are a must-read for the serious Philip Dick fan. Others may want to read his other, more approachable Science Fiction novels.
Profile Image for Paolo Beffa.
39 reviews1 follower
February 17, 2022
Valis

Il lavoro più riuscito del trittico. Forse proprio perchè quello con meno ambizioni romanzesche. A un certo punta Dick prova a inserire nelle sue considerazioni mistiche un po' di intreccio. Ma dure solo 20 pagine.
Ho delle difficoltà a dare una qualunque valenza al sincretismo ad mentula canis tra gnosticismo cristiano e filosofie orientali destoricizzate.

Divina Invasione

L'unico vero romanzo del lotto. Ripete più o meno le stesse considerazioni di Valis appiccicandoli a quello che poteva essere un racconto breve di Dick di media qualità.

La trasmigrazione di Timothy Archer

Terribile.
Probabilmente non era nelle intenzioni di Dick, ma è anche un ritratto di una generazione di intellettuali americani che si è autodistrutta tra droghe e improbabili eclettismi culturali.
Profile Image for Alanseinfeld.
207 reviews
March 18, 2025
The VALIS trilogy comprises VALIS, The Divine Invasion and The Transmigration of Timothy Archer is one of Philip K. Dick's most autobiographical and philosophical novels. It explores themes of reality, divinity, and mental illness, blending science fiction with Gnostic theology and personal experiences.The book is a complex mix of fiction, autobiography, and metaphysical speculation, dealing with Dick’s own experiences with paranoia, schizophrenia, and religious revelation. The Transmigration... moves away from science fiction and focuses more on philosophy, theology, and personal reflection. It’s one of Dick’s most introspective and character-driven works, loosely based on real events and people in his life. Overall worth reading and would recommend.
Profile Image for Niccolò Petrilli.
86 reviews
October 20, 2022
Un libro geniale, che avrebbe potuto essere IL capolavoro di Dick, un testo trasversale in grado di resistere secoli, e che sarebbe stato celebrato come un caposaldo del postmoderno e di un intero secolo di narrativa statunitense.

Avrebbe potuto, perché invece é un miscuglio informe e senza senso, senza origine né direzione. Un infantile ed inutile delirio religioso narcisista che mi pento di aver voluto affrontare.
21 reviews
October 17, 2025
Se uno nella storia ha detto di essere il Figlio di Dio, l'uomo deve vagliare questa ipotesi per essere ragionevole.
Così Dick, nella Trilogia, non si esime da questa domanda, in maniera assolutamente originale, con un dispendio (talvolta eccessivo) di citazioni e riferimenti colti.
Divina Invasione rimane, a mio parere, il più compiuto dei tre. La storia di Timothy Archer la più misteriosa.
Assolutamente da leggere!
Profile Image for Franz.
126 reviews
December 6, 2025
pochi spoiler qui, i libri li dovrete comunque leggere per immergervi nei mondi.

Una trilogia che è la summa della scrittura dickiana.
Dallo sdoppiamento di Horselover Fat, alla lotta tra Yah e Belial, al libro finale, uscito postumo, dove l'autore affronta il tema della follia e della religione, della credulità e della fede, il tutto partendo nel giorno dell'assassinio di John Lennon, che dà forma alle prime pagine a livello emozionale.
Profile Image for Louis Rivera.
1 review2 followers
July 18, 2024
Fascinating look into the mind of one of the most underrated visionary authors of the 20th Century. Was PKD contacted by an alien intelligence? Does a madman explore the nuances of his own mental demise? PKD’s work continues to provoke a thoughtful exploration of the conundrums of modern life decades after his death. Worth reading after you’ve explored some of his other works.
1 review
August 15, 2020
Seriously, read this

I don’t want to suggest that the matter in this story is easy and accessible, but I do believe it essential to Dick, and to those who have read him seriously.
I hope that you can enjoy it as I do
Profile Image for Eduardo.
8 reviews1 follower
September 23, 2020
Li 10% do livro e achei um porre. Cheguei na feliz idade em que você se dá conta de que não vai conseguir ler tudo o que quer antes de morrer, portanto, abandono livros sem dó hoje em dia.

É libertador.
Profile Image for Amine.
8 reviews2 followers
January 26, 2023
What a mind-bending journey through the nature of reality and the divine. Philip K dick or how I like to call him; the Master explorer of the human condition, is in my opinion the best sci fi writer to delve into those depths.
Profile Image for Chris Fox.
68 reviews2 followers
July 23, 2023
Religious Science Fiction means Philip K. Dick

This Trilogy is his masterpiece, No question. And it has potential to stimulate much further reading.

One must also read Ubik, Palmer Eldritch, electric Sheep ... What an important writer.
Profile Image for Simone Corami.
42 reviews1 follower
January 15, 2021
Forse è l’opera in cui Dick combina al meglio il suo talento visionario con la vocazione di profeta. Non è facile ma alla fine lascia molto nel lettore.
Profile Image for Zemaemidjehuty.
Author 4 books5 followers
January 11, 2022
I am biased because this is my favorite book trilogy but for sci-fi, these books get very real and open up a new way to understand God.
Profile Image for Rachel.
7 reviews25 followers
June 25, 2022
not what I expected, had some interesting thoughts,
1 review
July 22, 2022
Way, way, way tooooooooooooo long. An absolute chore, not a pleasure.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 62 reviews

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