The Penultimate Truth Audiobook By Philip K. Dick cover art

The Penultimate Truth

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The Penultimate Truth

By: Philip K. Dick
Narrated by: Nick Podehl
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About this listen

In the future, most of humanity lives in massive underground bunkers, producing weapons for the nuclear war they’ve fled. Constantly bombarded by patriotic propaganda, the citizens of these industrial anthills believe they are waiting for the day when the war will be over and they can return above ground. But when Nick St. James, president of one anthill, makes an unauthorized trip to the surface, what he finds is more shocking than anything he could imagine.

©1964 Philip K Dick (P)2012 Brilliance Audio, Inc.
Fantasy Fiction Literary Fiction Science Fiction War
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What listeners say about The Penultimate Truth

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    4 out of 5 stars

Excellent narration, thought provoking story

Very thought-provoking as are all PKD novels it seems, definitely worth the time to listen. Also excellent narration!

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Prescient and perfect for our times

I read this book 35 years ago and have thoroughly enjoyed it again as an audiobook, here in the era of ' alternative facts.' Well worth a listen. Hilarious, horrible and masterful.

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3 people found this helpful

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Not good for PKD

I enjoy PKD more and more but this one does not work. There are some good ideas but it's rather uneven. PKD is at his best when he's got the alternate reality stuff going as in Scanner Darkly which is excellent and Androids, and Policeman, and Valis. So far those are the standouts for me and i wouldn't hesitate to recommend those. I will keep going with him but it seems in general that his early stuff isn't quite there yet, and then later on he seems to be running 50/50, excellent alternating with confused. High Castle also great.

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Enjoyable story

Enjoyable story, had the background of alternate interpretations of reality and (current to today) the fake news

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Captivating

Listened to it so quickly I might do it again, adapts perfectly and technology only corroborates the tale

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4 people found this helpful

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Classic Sci-Fi

love this book. everything i love about a dystopian future in one book. you can see where modern science fiction followed in it's footsteps, intentional or not. it's also got a tinge of reality relatable to 2024. not too far off. maybe we'll be here in a couple more decades.

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Just not all that great a story...

It had my attention for a good portion until the stuff about documentaries came about. Dude lost me about then.

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    3 out of 5 stars

Good but not fantastic

This book definitely has its moments. I like but don’t love it. It isn’t offensive. This was from PKDs mature and productive period. It is kind of a blend of Defenders We and The Man Whose Teeth Were All Exactly Alike.


I have to mention that the voice talent is particularly good when reading this book.

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Not One of Dick's Best

I've read or listened to about 15 of Philip K. Dick's novels and, unfortunately, this is not one of his best. The Penultimate Truth is basically an expansion of Dick's excellent short story, "The Defenders," which involves a dystopian post-atomic war society where Wes-Dem (Western Democracy) survivors live underground, informed by their government that the war continues and that the surface of the Earth is too toxic to allow long-term human survival. Beyond that, The Penultimate Truth involves a Wes-Dem president Talbot Yancy, who is really an artificial simulacrum programmed to read speeches written by skilled propagandists, called Yance-men. The main hero of the novel, Nicholas St. James, is the president of a densely packed underground housing unit, christened the "Tom Mix," who is coerced by residents to venture to the surface in search of an artificial pancreas necessary to save the life of the Tom Mix's resident mechanic. As in most Dick novels, there are various plot threads, conspiracies and eccentrics characters, but all in all the plot and themes seem a bit too thin to sustain a full length PKD novel. Newcomers to Philip K. Dick would be better off starting out with UBIK, The Man in the High Castle or Dr. Bloodmoney, which are much better books.

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    2 out of 5 stars
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Not the dick I wanted

I've read about 20 PKD books and this is the first one I was just unable to finish but to be honest it could of been the narrator. The part where he has to talk as an older man that can hardly breath is almost unlistenable had to turn it off it was pretty annoying. Although other then that his regular speaking voice was tolerable it was just that one characters voice.

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3 people found this helpful