Kaori (post: 1485000) wrote:What are your favorite books by Philip K. Dick? I’ve only ever read Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?, which I thought was terrific.
Also, what are your favorites by Lewis, Bonhoeffer, and Kierkegaard?
Last but not least, what places in Japan have you traveled to, and what has been your favorite experience in Japan?
PKD: My favorites are
The Man in the High Castle and
Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep, but perhaps not for the reasons you would think.
I like
The Man in the High Castle now -- admittedly more than I did when I first read it -- because I came to realize how Dick had used the
I Ching to generate the story. (In re-reading it, I saw that the novel paralleled his use, and seemingly broke the "fourth wall" in a very clever way). So, I admired the effort, although I think the quality of the writing is not quite as engaging (though I got spoiled with too much William Gibson, perhaps).
I read
Androids after I saw
BladeRunner, so I had a hard time getting Harrison Ford out of my mind's eye, but I still found it to be a terrific novel.
Kierkegaard: I was able to force myself to get through all of
Fear and Trembling, which is a really great work, but I likened it to running a full marathon in tiny little circles. I probably actually read it three times through because I had to re-start each paragraph at least once. Since then, I've gone mostly for excerpts of his writings, which are much more digestable. I hope that's not cheating, although I feel like I might be reading some of his work outside the context of the whole book.
Bonhoeffer: Without a doubt
The Cost of Discipleship belongs on every serious Christian's bookshelf. I will say that I do not totally agree with him on all of his doctrine, but he is dead on target with his criticisms of the modern church. I don't typically use a highlighter on my books (I turn down the corner of a page if I want to go back and re-read a passage), but I marked up the two copies I've owned thoroughly.
Lewis: Good heavens, where to begin:
The Screwtape Letters, which I've read a dozen times at least, and have even seen the play adaptation]The Great Divorce[/i], which I keep coming back to and turning over in my mind (forget Narnia, they should have made a movie of that novel);
The Problem of Pain, which is really a good book to get you thinking if you can conquer the first chapter (it took me a few tries).
I like
Mere Christianity, although I'm not as fond of it as I once was; I'm actually beginning to understand more of what he was trying to say in
The Abolition of Man, although some critics do score points for Lewis' hijacking of the concept of the Tao (but, again, I think I can appreciate what he meant). Lewis' philosophies are not that much different than mine (or is it the other way around?).
I was never quite a fan of the Narnia series once I got past
The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe.
Japan: I've been to some of the more recognizable places: Tokyo, Osaka, Kyoto, Nara, Hiroshima, Himeji. My wife and I climbed (up to the 8th Station) Mount Fuji, then spent a wonderful day relaxing at the hot baths in Fujiyoshida.
It would be very hard to choose a favorite experience. I loved the Ghibli Museum; visited the Yasakuni Shrine during the Mitama Matsuri; shopped at Mandarke and Animate and Kinokuniya and Tokyu Hands; was shaken by an earthquake while in an Internet Cafe in Shibuya; marveled at Sanjusangendo and the Golden Pavillion; took a panoramic picture of Tokyo from the Rainbow Bridge (because I wanted an image that looked like the landscape from the opening of
Witch Hunter Robin); rode the Shinkansen up and down Honshu; got lost in the streets of Tokyo and didn't mind a bit; had the best sushi in my life in the Ginza district at a place that I've tried to find again and wasn't able to; saw the Gundam at Odaiba; and found the Mimizuka in Kyoto, even though it isn't on tourist maps anymore.
But, if I had to pick: I was on the Philosopher's Walk in Kyoto during
hanami, during the blooming of the cherry blossoms. Walking along, surrounded by the Japanese people, enjoying nature, on a sunny day, it's both a singular and corporate experience that is unique in all the world.
Thank you for asking (and for your very kind comment).