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Loading... The Turning Wheel and Other Storiesby Philip K. Dick
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In 'Nanny', children are taken care of by robotic nurses until things go sour with a kind of arms race.
In the title story, Earth is in decline far in the future under a controlling, caste-based society based on the idea of reincarnation. Everyone who does practical things, such as farming, are low down on the social ladder, and those who repair technology and deal with metal working etc, the Technos, are the lowest of all. In fact, they consist of Caucasians, who are despised as being possible descended from Neanderthals, and whose ancestors are blamed for the current state of the planet. Due to this attitude, no machinery is repaired and everything is breaking down, while the environment is impoverished and it is hard to grow food, with disease being rife. I won't describe the story further, other than to say by today's standards it probably comes over as racist from the point of view that only white people are capable of developing solutions and turning the situation around.
In 'The Defenders' all-out war between the USA and the Soviet Union has resulted in the survivors living underground in massive cities and continuing to pursue the war through the use of surface dwelling robots.
'Adjustment Team' is a rather odd story, more fantasy than SF, which deals with the results when one man is in the wrong place at the wrong time. The attitudes of the time are again conveyed by the means of distracting a key female character from pursuit of a vital point of information by having a vacuum cleaner salesman turn up.
In 'Psi-Man', the existence of psychics whose powers are demonstrably real has apparently been established since the late 1960s, but by 2017 when the story is set, war has reduced a remnant of humanity to living in communes among wastelands. Only a handful of psychics exist and they live among the ruins and provide services such as healing to the desperate commune dwellers. One is able to time travel by exchanging places with earlier selves and has been back many times to try to convince a key military figure to not tell the President of the USA to launch the initial attack, but without success. This was a rather muddled story with the viewpoint switching around quite a lot, though it ends with a ray of hope.
'The Commuter' is a surreal tale of what happens when a community which should not be there eventually comes into existence.
'A Present for Pat' is a really odd story, featuring the present - a being from a higher dimension - brought back as a present from Ganymede, and the havoc this creature unleashes. Again, rather fantasy in style.
'Breakfast at Twilight' is another war story; this time, a whole family spontaneously are brought forward in time to when the country is bombarded by robot controlled bombs.
Finally, 'Shell Game' is the tale of the survivors of a crashed spaceship who are under attack - though it increasingly becomes clear that they are a big part of the problem themselves.
I have greatly enjoyed some of Dick's novels, such as Ubik and , but I found these stories rather too much a product of their time. They are from the early part of Dick's career, so are interesting as a historical artefact, but for me do not rate more than 2 stars. ( )