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368 pages, Hardcover
First published July 1, 1994
Gather Yourselves Together really isn't that great of a story per se and if this is the first Dick book you read, I doubt you will like it. But if you are a Dickhead like myself, then I think, perhaps, maybe, you will like it. I am interested in his early life so much that this review rating is somewhat biased, so if you are new to Philip K. Dick, you may not want to take my word for it here and this definitely isn't the book to start out with
In the end, Gather Yourselves Together is much more successful as a historical document than as a novel. Gather shows us just how early some of Dick’s themes and tropes began to develop. Though it doesn’t come close to the tear-your-heart-out intensity of Dick’s best work, it remains, I think, a valuable addition to the man’s work, and an invaluable window into his life.
After the final victory of Mao Zedong's Chinese Communists in 1949, an American company prepares to abandon their Chinese operations, leaving three people behind to oversee transitional affairs - Carl Fitter, Verne Tildon, and Barbara Mahler.