The Golden Man by Philip K. Dick
Omniscient mutant has the key to the future?
Our Review
Published February 25, 2011
This week, Stuart turns to The Golden Man, Philip K. Dick’s 1953 short story that later inspired the Nicolas Cage thriller Next. Dick’s original tale is lean, strange, and far more unsettling than its Hollywood counterpart. Set in a post-nuclear future, it follows a mutant who can glimpse the immediate future and survives by instinct alone, hunted by a society that fears what it cannot control. Stuart explores how Dick uses this simple premise to examine evolution, fate, and humanity’s urge to destroy what’s different, and considers whether the short story’s stark vision delivers a sharper punch than the big-budget adaptation.
Book Synopsis
A science fiction story set in the future where the a government agency hunts mutants created by a nuclear war. The story centers around one mutant, a tall golden god-like man named Cris and his ability to see the future instead of the past.

Leave a Comment