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Worlds Without End Blog

Philip K. Dickathon: Vulcan’s Hammer Posted at 1:04 AM by Charles Dee Mitchell

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Guest Blogger and WWEnd Member, Charles Dee Mitchell, has contributed a great many book reviews to WWEnd and we’ve invited him to contribute to our blog. This is the latest in Dee’s series of Philip K. Dick reviews that he started on his blog www.potatoweather.blogspot.com. We’ll be posting one every week until he runs out of reviews or gets tired of Philip K. Dick books.


Even Lawrence Sutin, PKD’s biographer, refers to Vulcan’s Hammer as dreck. As per usual for Dick’s novels of this period, there has been a devastating war in the 1970’s, and this time around humanity’s bad idea for how to handle post-war society it to turn everything over to computers. These machines’ decisions will be based purely on logic, war will come to an end, but of course an elaborate police system must be put into place to maintain this logical utopia. Underground movements are breaking out across the globe.

The computer has had three incarnations, Vulcan I, Vulcan II, and the current Vulcan III that only one man can access in its impregnable stronghold deep underground in Switzerland. The current director maintains a fondness for dusty old Vulcan II. He enjoys making the punch cards that feed it information and then reading the printouts it releases, although those messages now take up to a day or so to appear. There’s something a little creepy about Vulcan III with its digital screens and its suspicion that its humans are not telling it the whole story. Of course, Vulcan III decides to take matters into its own hands.

Dick’s novel has all the pieces in place but then has nowhere to go with them. The conclusion is as predictable as it is anti-climactic. Vulcan’s Hammer was the "B side" of an Ace Double, so it has if nothing else the virtue of brevity.

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