Jim Fergesson – owner of Modern TV Sales & Service.Stuart McConchie – salesman at Modern TV Sales & Service before the disaster.*Yes, I read this before, but my memory can charitably be described as not good. The whole thing comes together as one of Dick’s most accessible novels, and I would highly recommend it. Even Stuart McConchie in this one manages to rise above the standard bland everyman in many PKD books. He serves as a DJ to the inhabitants of Earth as he passes over each day. On top of all this there is a man stuck in orbit, since a rocket to Mars had been launched moments before the disaster. The armless and legless (and also telekinetic) Hoppy Harrington, who had been held down most of his life, is able to become BMOC of this West Marin community until a showdown with seven-year-old Edie (and Bill) Keller that caught me off guard.* Tree in a West Marin commune where the rest of the story takes place. The mentally unhinged (and telekinetic somehow) Bluthgeld is the man responsible for raining down the nuclear bombs, and he hides out as Mr. I liked it even more reading it a second time.Īfter a few chapters set in Berkeley, California on the last day of modern civilization in 1981 we jump ahead seven years to a world trying to rebuild itself after a nuclear disaster. Bloodmoney is Dick’s most unique collection of memorable characters in one story.
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