Fiction
eAudiobook
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Made available through hoopla
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1 online resource (1 audio file (22 min.)) : digital
ISBN/ISSN
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Dick, Philip K. Lost Sci-Fi. #bk. 97
NOTES
Read by Scott Miller
They were born near the radiation lab-soft, crawling, half-human things that no one wanted to claim as children. At first there were only a few, then dozens, then enough that cars began running over them on lonely highways and farmers started moving away in fear. Ernest Gretry is sent from Washington to quietly "take care of the problem," but when he sees the creatures up close-building, learning, forming a colony-he realizes the real threat isn't simply that they exist, but how fast they are changing. They don't walk. They don't speak. But they think. And they build. What begins as a cleanup operation turns into a moral nightmare as parents must decide whether to hand over their own mutated children, towns collapse under anxiety and silence, and the crawlers continue to grow their underground city-spreading, tunneling, preparing. The story starts as body horror and ends as something closer to cosmic inevitability. If humanity hoped to contain the mutants, it may already be too late… because the crawlers have plans of their own. "The Crawlers" is classic Philip K. Dick: a brutal, thought-provoking collision of science fiction, paranoia, and social commentary written long before most readers were ready to face its ideas. Dick asks the hard question beneath every "invasion" story-what if the new species isn't invading… what if it's replacing us? Philip K. Dick (1928-1982) reshaped science fiction by treating it as a laboratory for what-ifs about identity, perception, government power, and the fragile nature of reality. His novels and stories became the foundation for films like Blade Runner, Total Recall, Minority Report, The Adjustment Bureau, and A Scanner Darkly. His work has been adapted into TV series, taught in universities, and debated by philosophers and futurists
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