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Beyond Lies the Wub

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In "Beyond Lies the Wub", the crew of a spaceship buys a "wub", a large pig-like animal from a native Martian to eat on the way home. The Wub turns out to be a sentient being capable of intelligent conversation, empathy, and possibly telepathy and mind control. When a crew member converses with the remarkable Wub, the captain makes a rash and violent decision that could put the return mission in danger.

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First published April 1, 1951

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About the author

Philip K. Dick

2,006 books22.5k 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 275 reviews
Profile Image for Maureen .
1,713 reviews7,512 followers
December 7, 2020
Philip.K.Dick’s first published story ‘Beyond lies the Wub,’ tells the story of a Captain and his crew returning to Earth from Mars, having purchased various creatures with a view to eating them. Among these creatures is a Wub.

What is a Wub? A Wub is like a huge pig, but unlike your regular pig, he’s telepathic and likes to discuss philosophy and myths. The Captain thinks the Wub would make a great meal, after all he must weigh around 400 pounds, but not all of the crew are in agreement. Would you eat the dinner that had just been philosophising with you?
Short, thought provoking, but amusing tale.
Profile Image for Bill Kerwin.
Author 2 books84.3k followers
January 19, 2020

Philip K. Dick's first published short story (Planet Stories, July 1952), begins with what may have been a familiar plot point even by the early 50's: a space ship crew, having acquired a cargo-hold filled with alien animals for food, plans to devour a creature--the "wub" of the title--more intelligent and psychically gifted than all the humans on the ship put together. Of course, things do not turn out as expected.

In spite of this conventional theme, this Dick tale is memorable for two reasons: 1) the humorous yet melancholy characterization of the wub which, in addition to being entertaining in itself, disarms the reader and leaves him unprepared for..., 2) the conclusion, which--in addition to being surprising and amusing--calls into question (as Dick would often do in the future) the nature of human personality and the persistence of individual identity.

All in all, a pretty good start for a writer's public career.
Profile Image for J.L.   Sutton.
666 reviews1,251 followers
October 5, 2019
I’ve been reading a fair bit of Philip K. Dick this year and so felt it would be fun to tackle his first published SF story, “Beyond Lies the Wub” (Planet Stories, July 1952). Not surprisingly, it is a bit odd. Like his other works, PKD presents the reader with the possibility of new realities, in this case, an alien creature known as a wub that is intelligent and telepathic (even though it most resembles a huge pig and admits it would be delicious to eat). It describes itself as “Tolerant, eclectic, catholic. We live and let live.” As he makes his plea not to be dinner, the wub demonstrates that he is a free-willed, thinking creature. As he connects his argument to mythological archetypes (repeatedly invoking Odysseus to make his case), the wub moves toward a definition of what it means to be human.

Even though this work is from very early in his career, the twist at the end definitely reminded me of PKD. I plan to read more of PKD’s short fiction. I still prefer his more developed fiction, but I enjoyed this quick trip into strangeness. 3.25 stars
Profile Image for Lyn.
2,009 reviews17.6k followers
April 15, 2019
What is a wub?

A wub is like a big telepathic pig that is cultured and likes to discuss philosophy and myths.

There is almost no way to review this brilliant, original 1952 publication from a very young PKD (24 years old) without spoiling, so I’ll just write that if you call yourself a science fiction fan you should invest the less than 15 minutes it will take to read.

An upper level English course called Science Fiction literature should include a discussion of this excellent short work.

** 2019 addendum - it is a testament to great literature that a reader recalls the work years later and this is a story about which I frequently think.

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Profile Image for Tadiana ✩Night Owl☽.
1,880 reviews23.3k followers
December 31, 2018
Philip K. Dick's first published story, from 1952, has a group of humans loading up their spaceship with various birds and animals from Mars, which they plan to eat on the way back to Earth, despite the disapproval of the Martians. Captain Franco, it is clear from the start, is a boorish guy. But Franco approves when one of his men, Peterson, shows up with a 400 pound pig-like animal called a wub. Clearly good eating is ahead!

But it quickly turns out that the wub is an intelligent, sentient being, with a taste for philosophical discussions and a self-deprecating sense of humor, not to mention some other powers. Can the men on the spaceship really kill and eat it? Franco, undaunted, says yes, definitely, even though the wub and at least some of his men disagree with that plan.

There's a nice twist to the story, but I liked that Philip Dick reached beyond the standard space adventure plot to explore some deeper themes about ethics and use of resources. It's interesting that the leader of the humans, their captain, apparently has the least moral development.

This short story is free online here at Project Gutenberg.
Profile Image for Bradley.
Author 9 books4,867 followers
May 27, 2018
PKD's first published story.

Sooooo short, very funny. :)

Me, personally, I'd have just talked with the poor alien and enjoyed his company, but you know how these idiot humans are. Always thinking with their stomachs. :)

Good thing the revenge was totally apropos. :)

Very fun. Classic PKD. :)
Profile Image for Brian Yahn.
310 reviews608 followers
September 13, 2016
Thoroughly enjoyed this story.

What would happen if your dinner could talk to you and asked you not to eat it?

Philip K. Dick has the answer [=
Profile Image for Navid Momeni.
34 reviews18 followers
April 20, 2024
داستان درمورد موجودی فضایی شبیه یه خوک چاق و تنبل هست به نام “واب” که میتونه با تلپاتی با انسان ها ارتباط برقرار کنه و یه جورایی یه موجود دارای هوش و آگاهی هست که افراد داخل سفینه قصد کشتنش رو دارن(که بتونن گوشتشو بخورن) و جلوتر افراد داخل سفینه متوجه این موضوع(هوش و ذکاوتش)میشن و بقیه ی داستان که باید خودتون بخونین.و اینکه آخر داستان مثل داستان های دیگه ی فیلیپ کی دیک یه پلات توئیست خفن داره.
Profile Image for Viji (Bookish endeavors).
470 reviews159 followers
July 17, 2014
I AM A WORM..

When I was in class tenth,we had a chapter on Nehru,an extract from his 'discovery of India' in our English text. While lecturing on that,our teacher used to ask us students what we were in comparison to the great brains like Nehru and Wells. Hearing our silence,he would answer his own question,making us repeat after him,"WE ARE WORMS". And after that every time he asked us 'what are you',we answered,"I AM A WORM". So every time I hear of a worm or read of it,I am automatically led to think of myself.
Seeing the wub in this story talking of Odysseus and democracy and individuation and reading our minds,and reading about the super frog in Murakami's 'After the quake' talking about Dostoevsky,Hemingway and Tolstoy,I am led to think of the truth behind the position that humans are the superior intellects on this earth. What if we are nothing but a tiny worm in the chain of life.?! What if we are nothing but minute components of an extremely sophisticated program.? If we were given a glance of our stand,would we be anymore humble.? Or would we lynch that being who shows the reality like the one in 'the man who saw the future'?

A QUESTION TO THE NON-VEGETARIANS OUT THERE INCLUDING ME..

If you were to meet your would-be food before it's killed,and if it were to talk to you of of your own thoughts and your philosophy and of the faults and fineries of humanity,would you still eat it.? If you know that it is another being like you with all the sophisticated thought processes with an ability to comprehend and appreciate things like you do,would you still be able to savor it like you did in the past.?
I won't blame others but would raise the first finger against myself. I am a lover of dishes made of chicken,and friends of mine mockingly call KFC my grandpa's house. I'm sure I'm not going to look at it the same way as before. I'm deeply moved,but how deeply is left to be seen.

Thought-provoking,original,deeply moving.
HIGHEST RECOMMENDATION.
Profile Image for Rosh ~catching up slowly~.
2,389 reviews4,925 followers
February 24, 2021
Never thought I would say the words "cute" and "science fiction" in the same sentence but that's what this is: a cute science fiction story.

Captain and his team are returning from an interplanetary expedition after capturing some galactic creatures. One such special creature is the wub, who appears to the crew to be some kind of giant pig. While the Captain ponders over what to do with the heavy animal that is making his spaceship use extra fuel, a surprising twist occurs.

I enjoyed this story a lot. It has many funny moments and it moves really quickly because of the conversational pattern. While there are a bit too many Christian references in the conversation, I guess it's the norm for a sci-fi story written in the 1950s.

This story is in the public domain and available on Project Gutenberg.



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Profile Image for Trish.
2,393 reviews3,747 followers
May 27, 2018
This is a very funny and very short short story.

A crew is travelling from Mars back to Earth and since they are starving, they contemplate killing and eating a pig-like creature one of the crew members purchased on Mars - the titular wub.

This, however, is no ordinary creature as the captain soon find out in a very funny way. *lol*

Can't put my finger on where I've heard the narrator before but he was VERY good in imitating the different accents of the crew members as well as giving the wub a voice of its own that was distinguishable.
Profile Image for Jess ❈Harbinger of Blood-Soaked Rainbows❈.
585 reviews322 followers
November 19, 2020
This was the first published story by one of the masters of science fiction himself, an author I hate to admit I have never read. It is one of his stories that is available for free on amazon, or on Project Gutenberg, or in another one of many places online. Philip K. Dick may not be an author I’ve read, but that does not mean that I have not loved some of his ideas.



We all know him as the writer behind Blade Runner, an epic cult scifi classic. But did you also know that Hollywood has made so many of his stories into movies also? Like Impostor with Gary Sinise, Paycheck with Ben Affleck, Minority Report with Tom Cruise, Next with Nick Cage. A lot of those movies I really loved before really getting into science fiction novels and stories. Amazon also created a very awesome limited TV series anthology with each episode reenacting one of Dick’s stories. His ideas of technology and humanity or progression going too far, or the downside of scientific advancement are all very cutting edge and extremely relevant. I applaud him for writing about the ethics and morality behind the science, to examine our society and culture and where we are going. He dives deep in many of his themes and this very short story is no exception. It has some funny moments, but it is a story that makes me feel uncomfortable. It examines humanity and our society of excess. And this story was written in 1952. I can’t imagine how he would feel about our society now.


It begins on Mars where a crew of explorers and their captain are loading up the ship with animals that they have found there and intend to eat on the way home. One of the crew comes up with an enormous pig like creature that the Martians call a wub, and the captain salivates just thinking of the meal the creature will provide.

Tides are turned when the wub turns out to be intelligent and communicative, and discusses philosophy and myth. It also seems as though the wub actually has powers beyond human capacity, but it is not a creature disposed to violence.
We're very catholic. Tolerant, eclectic, catholic. We live and let live. That's how we've gotten along.

Even with his revelation, the captain cannot see the creature as anything other than a tasty meal, despite protests from his crew. The ending has a clever twist to it that I enjoyed. This story packs a rather large punch for being so short, and I will always appreciate a story that makes me think long after I’ve finished. Recommended! 4 stars.

Day twelve of my November challenge to try and read one science fiction or fantasy short story a day.
Profile Image for David.
1,630 reviews176 followers
August 18, 2021
In addition to 44 published novels, Dick wrote approximately 121 short stories, most of which appeared in science fiction magazines during his lifetime. Although Dick spent most of his career as a writer in near-poverty, ten of his stories have been adapted into popular films since his death, including Blade Runner, Total Recall, A Scanner Darkly, Minority Report, Paycheck, Next, Screamers, and The Adjustment Bureau.

Beyond Lies the Wub by Philip K. Dick is one of the author's many short stories. "The wub, sir," Peterson said. "It spoke!" The slovenly wub might well have said: Many men talk like philosophers and live like fools. It was brought on board the spaceship with the intent of cooking and eating it on the long return trip; but as is often the case the best laid plans often go awry...Beyond Lies the Wub was Philip K. Dick's first published story and appeared in the legendary ”Planet Stories” pulp magazine.
Profile Image for Tristram Shandy.
877 reviews265 followers
July 3, 2017
Don’t Parley with Your Food!

Appearing in “Planet Stories” in 1952, Beyond Lies the Wub, the first story by Dick that was published, could actually make you become a vegetarian. It invites us on board a spacecraft that has just taken provisions, mainly animals, on Mars and is now on its way back to earth.

One of the animals that have been taken aboard, an enormous pig-like creature, which the Martians call a wub, and which makes the captain’s mouth water already, turns out to be an intelligent creature, endowed with the gift of speech and telepathic powers. It is strongly opposed to being made into a main course, although it concedes that it has heard people praise the pleasures its meat affords to the palate, but still it would consider any form of processing in the galley an unfriendly, even a barbaric act. Captain Franco – is his name a coincidence? –, however, remains generally unimpressed by all these arguments and even by the wub’s inclination to discuss mythology, and he is even willing to carry out the act of slaughter himself, with a certain pride in his cold-bloodedness. All the wub asks him then is for him to look into its eyes while he is firing the mortal bullet … with surprising consequences.

The story is not only food for thought, if you pardon the pun, but also grimly funny, for example in a passage like this:

”French nodded. ‘Try to hit the brain. It’s no good for eating. Don’t hit the chest. If the rib cage shatters, we’ll have to pick bones out.’ […]

‘I’m going out,’ Jones said, his face white and sick. ‘I don’t want to see it.’

‘Me, too,’ French [!!!] said.”


This story actually got me thinking on why some people nowadays take photos of their food and post them.
Profile Image for Richard Dominguez.
958 reviews127 followers
November 20, 2020
I found this a quick fun listen as a group of astronauts visiting Mars encounter a "Wub" (described as a rather large pig). The astronauts being hungry naturally consider eating the Wub, till the Wub speaks to them.
At just under 18 minutes the author has us contemplating what exactly is intelligence and where we draw the line between civility and barbarism. Is our survival paramount (i.e. do they ends justify the means).
A good short story that shows us the knack that the author has for taking a simple idea and pushing it all the way past the norm.
Profile Image for Angus McKeogh.
1,380 reviews81 followers
May 24, 2020
I believe this was Dick’s first ever published work, so wanted to see what it was all about. Received it from a free offer. You can tell it’s from his early stuff, but the deeper lying psychological stuff is present even then.
Profile Image for Ania.
252 reviews37 followers
October 21, 2012
I don't know about you, but I picture the wub as a big Guinea Pig. Something like this perhaps:
description

I have to say that originally I rated this story with 3 stars: enjoyable but nothing special. And then it hit me. What if the wub wasn't really a space hog? what if the space hog was just an animal that previously ATE whatever else had the wub inside it, and was taken over by it? What if the wub "individuates", as he puts it, not by leaving his group in space or time, but by leaving the group "corporally", i.e. body to body? Questions like these immediately lifted this story up for me to a much higher level than I previously assumed...

The hero myth of Oedipus that the wub spoke about refers to the hero going out, individuating, collecting knowledge and then returning to his group. (For more on this check out: The Hero With a Thousand Faces.) Hence at the end of this short story I would have liked the wub, whom I see as the hero on his mythical journey, to be able to return to his people with the knowledge he's learned. But I guess this story is only about a single step in his journey, and so he hasn't finished it yet.
Profile Image for Richard.
Author 18 books70 followers
April 7, 2012
Dick isn't the greatest of scribblers--characters move with thin or confounding motives at times, flat dialogue--but the situations are magnificent. A ship presumably filling its hold ark-like for a long trip picks up a wub, a filthy creature supposedly tasty but also telepathic and intelligent. From here, as they cynically say, the hilarity ensues. A quick punch in the ethical gut.
Profile Image for Skyler Myers.
45 reviews28 followers
January 8, 2014
"Many men talk like philosophers and live like fools."

PROs:

* Original plot

* Interesting ethical ideas brought up

* Surprising twist at the end

CONs:

* Too short to really delve deeply into any ideas

* Simplistic dialogue

This is one of Phillip K. Dick's shortest short stories. It can easily be read and understood in less than thirty minutes, making it an easy and rewarding read. The plot is different from anything I've seen before and it has a good ending. I think it has breached potential.

"But wouldn't it be more in accord with your principles of democracy if we all drew straws, or something along that line? After all, democracy is to protect the minority from just such infringements."
Profile Image for Ketevan Kanchashvili.
221 reviews27 followers
July 8, 2018
Back on the farm we had hogs, dirty razor-back hogs. I can do it.
ფრიად აღსაფრთოვანებელი მოთხრობაა.
Profile Image for Fadoua ϟ.
381 reviews58 followers
January 12, 2021
My first K.Dick read and I really enjoyed it !!! wow
Profile Image for Terence Blake.
87 reviews54 followers
May 19, 2014
"Beyond Lies the Wub" is an interesting early short story, that is richer than may seem at first glance. Mythology, religion, and philosophy form a backdrop to the story. In particular, there are references to Odysseus and to Epicureanism.

I think the Odysseus reference could be filled out in several ways. Odysseus does not rely on brute force like Achilles, but on intelligence, cunning, ruse. This is another case where we can identify the Wub with Odysseus, as against the Achilles-like Captain. Futher, Odysseus had the idea of the Trojan Horse, and now the Captain’s body is a Trojan Horse concealing the Wub and carrying it back to Earth.

The eating of the Wub feels like a Eucharist scene, given that he talked about the parable of your Saviour, so “this is my body”; especially as it was accompanied by wine.

The little introduction: ” The slovenly wub might well have said: Many men talk like philosophers and live like fool.” seems to be a reference to the Epicurean philosophers, who held pleasure as the highest good. They were compared to swine by their critiques, mere gluttons. According to John Stuart Mill:

“When thus attacked, the Epicureans have always answered, that it is not they, but their accusers, who represent human nature in a degrading light; since the accusation supposes human beings to be capable of no pleasures except those of which swine are capable”

This seems to be the case in the story, where Captain Franco is the true swine (all he can think of is eating the wub, he has no care for its intelligence and culture, and so lives like a fool), despite his human body. The Wub is the philosopher despite his swine body (although he does take pleasure in eating too).

As for the name “wub”, I think it may be a “nonce word”, coined to be used for the occasion, for the nonce. It resembles Lewis Carroll’s “wabe” in Jabberwocky, which Humpty Dumpty glosses as the grass around a sundial because it “goes a long way before it, and a long way behind it”. As there is “beyond” in the title, this suggests that the wub, which originated “way behind us” in time, lies “way beyond” us in evolution and mental capacity.

Note: the idea that there is an Epicurean reference, however playful, is confirmed by the sequel "Not by its Cover", which I have not yet read. According to the Wikipedia entry: "Wub fur, so the story suggests, continues to live after the "death" of the Wub, and as such is highly prized owing to its postmortem production of a luxurious pelt that has numerous, albeit trivial, human applications. One such application is its use as a book cover by a Mars based publisher who issues a new Latin volume of Lucretius' poem De Rerum Natura (On the Nature of Things)".
Profile Image for Joseph Inzirillo.
394 reviews34 followers
June 27, 2016
Another PKD short work. Interesting story with an interesting twist. The Wub is great! An excellent quick read.
410 reviews1 follower
May 13, 2024
I'm not a short story person, but it turns out there's some I quite like! A fabulously simple and yet complex examination of human nature. A small crew leave a planet with an intelligent creature called a Wub in their custody, discussing philosophy and morality while the Captain decides whether or not to eat it. Punchy and thought-provoking.
Profile Image for Eric Mesa.
842 reviews26 followers
March 14, 2018
As expected from a Philip K Dick book, that was trippy. Talky in the style of golden and silver age science fiction, but I have a fondness for the style as some of my first science fiction exposure was in that style.

Not a bad plot, it's a quick read and available free from Project Gutenberg.
Profile Image for David.
110 reviews
March 7, 2019
Great short little story. The story entertains you and the ending knocks you on your ass
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