Breakfast At Twilight, Philip K. Dick
Breakfast At Twilight, Philip K. Dick
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Breakfast At Twilight
Trapped Between the Past and the Fallout

Author: Philip K. Dick

Narrator: Scott Miller

Unabridged: 44 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Scott Miller

Published: 02/15/2024


Synopsis

A normal morning turns into a nightmare when the McLean family wakes to find their suburban home surrounded by soldiers, ruins, and radioactive ash. What begins as confusion quickly becomes horror as they learn they’ve been thrust seven years into the future—into the middle of a global war that hasn’t even started yet in their own time. Their food is a treasure, their house is a miracle, and their very existence is a threat. As bombs fall and choices narrow, the family faces an impossible decision: stay and survive in a broken world, or risk everything on the slim chance that time will snap back and return them home.“Breakfast at Twilight” is Philip K. Dick at his sharpest—melding domestic life with paranoia, time displacement, and the looming shadow of nuclear war. It’s not just a story about the future, but about the quiet, dangerous comforts we take for granted in the present. Tense, fast-moving, and chillingly prophetic, it reads today with the same urgency it had when it first appeared in the pages of Amazing Stories in 1954.Philip K. Dick (1928–1982) is one of the most influential voices in 20th-century speculative fiction. Best known for works adapted into films such as Blade Runner, Total Recall, Minority Report, and A Scanner Darkly, Dick wrote more than 120 short stories and 44 novels exploring identity, reality, authority, and the fragility of human perception. His fiction blurred the lines between paranoia and prophecy, and he remains a pillar of classic sci-fi whose ideas continue to shape modern storytelling.

About Philip K. Dick

Over a writing career that spanned three decades, PHILIP K. DICK (1928–1982) published 36 science fiction novels and 121 short stories in which he explored the essence of what makes man human and the dangers of centralized power. Toward the end of his life, his work turned to deeply personal, metaphysical questions concerning the nature of God. Eleven novels and short stories have been adapted to film, notably Blade Runner (based on Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?), Total Recall, Minority Report, and A Scanner Darkly, as well as television's The Man in the High Castle. The recipient of critical acclaim and numerous awards throughout his career, including the Hugo and John W. Campbell awards, Dick was inducted into the Science Fiction Hall of Fame in 2005, and between 2007 and 2009, the Library of America published a selection of his novels in three volumes. His work has been translated into more than twenty-five languages.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Bill on June 02, 2019

“Breakfast at Twilight” (Amazing Stories September 1954) is an effective but not exceptional science fiction story about the horrors of war visiting a typical American neighborhood. It is a rather typical example of the “Cold War” inspired fiction of the time, and lacks the unique mind-blowing imagi......more

Goodreads review by Rocky on June 08, 2017

If you try imagining Rod Serling narration hard enough, it's a dead ringer for a mediocre Twilight Zone episode.......more

Goodreads review by stRe4Ddm on January 09, 2015

Great only in the way that it shows how profoundly the cold war and its atmosphere back then influenced PKD and his works. He's truly a symptom of his times, a unique phenomenon only made possible by a technologically accelerating world on the verge of self-destruction. The text can be found here......more