The three stigmata of Palmer Eldritch

191 pages

English language

Published Jan. 28, 1966 by Macfadden-Bartell.

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4 stars (8 reviews)

Originally published by Doubleday in hardcover in 1965. Copyright date 1964

From the back cover:

IT WAS ALWAYS SATURDAY

You woke each morning with the comfortable feeling that you didn't have to go to your job. Instead, you could climb into your brand new Jaguar, pick up your girl and go to the beach.

Except that when you looked into your shaving mirror you saw a note tacked up, written in your own hand:

THIS IS AN ILLUSION. MAKE GOOD USE OF YOUR TIME, BUDDY BOY.

Because the illusion wouldn't last. And soon you would be back as an unwilling colonist on the dreary planet Mars.

40 editions

Review of 'The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

Back to Dick (there's a lot of Dick in the SF Masterworks series).

Dropping in to a Dick novel, is like putting on a pair of comfy slippers. You know certain trappings are going to be there in the story - a few loner-type characters and almost certainly a drug of some description. How good a Dick novel is usually depends on how well he blends his familiar themes with new ideas and concepts.

In this novel, our main protagonists are involved, both knowingly and unknowingly, in a stable drug trade with off world colonies. Their legitimate business sells paraphernalia used to support the use of the drug. Palmer Eldritch returns from a distant star system, bringing with him a new, better, non-addictive, legal drug which looks to upset that status quo. Our protagonists are concerned only with themselves, and saving their own skins and empire.

A running theme with …