In iUniverse’s John C. Woodcock’s latest blog post, he uses the illustrious sci-fi author Philip K. Dick to demonstrate and further explain his form of writing.
In 1974, Dick had a revelation which ignited a superhuman feat of writing constantly over a long series of nights, running to eight thousand pages, a “sudden, discorporating slippage into vast and total knowledge that he would spend the rest of his life explicating, or exegeting.” The posthumous publication of some of these texts highlights Dick’s long and arduous attempt to understand what exactly was happening to him, in a similar manner to C. G. Jung’s efforts, as recorded in his Red Book. I can choose any page at random to get a feel for sheer movement taking place, on-rushing fervor, a furor, gathering rapids, as punctuation breaks down, or ceases really to matter, as an onrushing life begins to prevail. It’s like navigating a maelstrom at times, with little islands emerging only to be Philip K. Dickswept away again. The structure of that book is described as “a freewheeling voice that ranges through personal confession, esoteric scholarship, dream accounts, and fictional figures… one of the most improbable and mind-altering manuscripts ever brought to light.”
Read here to know more about iUniverse author John C. Woodcock’s insights on writing
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