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Our Friends from Frolix 8
- Narrated by: Nick Podehl
- Length: 7 hrs and 52 mins
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great narration, and with dick you cannot lose
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Publisher's Summary
In Our Friends from Frolix 8, the world is run by an elite few. And what determines whether one is part of the elite isn’t wealth or privilege, but brains. As children, every citizen of Earth is tested; some are found to be super-smart New Men and some are Unusuals with various psychic powers. The vast majority are Undermen, performing menial jobs in an overpopulated world.
Nick Appleton is an Underman, content to eke out an existence as a tire regroover. But after his son is classified as an Underman, Appleton begins to question the hierarchy. Strengthening his resolve, and energizing the resistance movement, is news that the great resistance leader Thors Provoni is returning from a trip to the farthest reaches of space. And he’s brought help: a giant, indestructible alien.
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What listeners say about Our Friends from Frolix 8
Average Customer RatingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Darwin8u
- 03-30-17
Unhatched eggs sat on by a cosmic chicken
"We may all be that soon. Unhatched eggs sat on by a cosmic chicken."
- Philip K. Dick, Our Friends from Frolix 8
description
I'm not sure how it stands as far as pages read, but in books read - no one is close for me to Philip K. Dick. I think this makes 29 or 30 of Dick's novels I've read (I won't count the LOA versions for the total, obviously). Just in case you are wondering, Nabokov, le Carré and Roth and the 2, 3, 4th place finishers (so far). When I think of PKD - the two-word description I keep coming back to is messy genius. In many ways (and this may just be influenced by some recent readings of Vollmann, etc.) Dick is similar to William T Vollmann (bear with me). They both are hypergraphic in their need to make some sense of the world (PKD peers ahead, Vollmann peers into the now and the past) through their words. They aren't aiming for polish, they are searching for truth and truth might just required 100,000+ words. Dick's genius seems to be not just that of a futurist, but as someone who is able to look forward with available information, see where technology, politics, religion will converge in the future (and I'm not sure there is anyone with a better grasp of this ever) AND then explore all the moral, social, religious ramifications. If he was just a futurist, that would be one thing. He reads the future and then writes about the consequences.
Anyway, 'Our Friends from Frolix 8' explores a future where political power rests with "unusuals" (telepaths) and "new men" (hyper-geniuses). Again, it is interesting to read this book along side Yuval Noah Harari Homo Deus: A Brief History of Tomorrow. Harari is trying to predict what will happen with the future evolution of man, man and machine, and machine. Dick is already there and his paints are wet, canvas tight, and brushes moving furiously. I think this PKD novel is probably under-read, under-appreciated. It doesn't have the same cachet as his more popular and more notable novels, but there is something deeply arresting about it.
I have written in other reviews about Patrick O'Brian and how I'm amazed that he could write 20 fantastic novels about basically the same thing (2 friends on a boat?). Here is additional proof that all someone needs are some good themes (drugs, paranoia, technology, religion, corporatism, consumption of the individual, etc.) and a genius can produce an almost infinite stack of entertaining books.
17 people found this helpful
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- Nate
- 08-18-16
greatly read
Not the best Dick ever but worth a read for sure. There were a few chapters, mainly philosophical that really made the book for me. As I heard someone say, if you only read one PKD book this probably shouldn't be it. If you're like me and read the first one and then within a few days had several others under your belt grab it. I will say the performance was outstanding. Each character was extremely unique from the others and captured the essence of what each was going through in every bit of dialogue, the dialogue just felt incredibly real and with some characters it changed greatly as they went through different changes and emotions, this is the main reason I gave the overall a 5 star.
1 person found this helpful
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- Not A Reality Show Host
- 11-04-21
LIght fare, extreme performance
Perhaps I am developing misphonia, but I find the reader's voice characterizations - not all, but some - to be inappropriate and so irritating, in some cases, as to render it unlistenable for yours truly..
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- Claire Z.
- 06-14-21
Amazing story, even better acting
This story, just like his others, is amazing. The story and characters are compelling and I felt as though I could not pause it! Nick Podehl does a phenomenal job reading all the characters. I wouldn't want to hear anyone else read it after hearing him!
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- Phillip J. Fitzsimmons
- 05-28-21
I enjoyed this program
I remember reading and liking this when it first came out in print. This is my second time to listen to the recording and I really enjoyed it.
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- Anonymous User
- 02-12-21
Great story, good narration, one minor annoyance
The narrator doesn't know how to say the word officer, but other than that he did a great job. Classic PKD.
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- Alan
- 08-07-15
A lesser-known work from PKD
Where does Our Friends from Frolix 8 rank among all the audiobooks you’ve listened to so far?
I enjoyed Mr. Podehl's voice, as critical as the plot/story, with audiobooks.
Any additional comments?
This eight (8) hour tale was given no chapter breaks. Bumping the wrong button on my player and we're back to the beginning. That's 1991 technology.
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- Jerry "JSFMIDIG"
- 10-24-13
philip k dick is too hard for me!
I've never tried to figure out rights from wrongs, too weak or strong, I'm dyslexic with memory disorders and pain from degenerate disc desease. I'm listening to get out of my head and so far his writing style creates religous thoughts for the reader (me) to evaluate which side I should consider. No other writers do this more than him! I'm sorry, i'd rather stick to Isaac Assmov (sorry the spelling) Henlein, A C. Clarke, Alan Dean Foster and many more. They are not easy to read either but by the end of the book the ride worked.
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- Amazon Customer
- 06-03-17
A perfect pulp Philip K Dick
I loved the world in this novel. it felt a little cyberpunk. The old men vs new men divide was an amplification of the sort of changes we find in history when there are paradigm changes in thought