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They
They | Kay Dick
8 posts | 7 read | 8 to read
A dark, dystopian portrait of artists struggling to resist violent suppressionqueer, English, a masterpiece. (Hilton Als) Set amid the rolling hills and the sandy shingle beaches of coastal Sussex, this disquieting novel depicts an England in which bland conformity is the terrifying order of the day. Violent gangs roam the country destroying art and culture and brutalizing those who resist the purge. As the menacing They creep ever closer, a loosely connected band of dissidents attempt to evade the chilling mobs, but its only a matter of time until their luck runs out. Winner of the 1977 South-East Arts Literature Prize, Kay Dicks They is an uncanny and prescient vision of a world hostile to beauty, emotion, and the individual.
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review
Jeg
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Pickpick

What a read. Written in 1977 and then destined to obscurity until rediscovered after her death and republished. A short powerful read. Very different, thought provoking and I think might be a classic.
Do read it. Doesn't take long.

15 likes1 stack add
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merelybookish
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Reading up on "archive moles" and the recent flurry of publishing projects dedicated to bringing forgotten and/or neglected books back into print. Tagged book is mentioned.
https://pocketmags.com/ca/prospect-magazine/march-2023/articles/1266350/meet-the...

The paper dolls LM Montgomery mug is from the last #muglove swap. Excited to open my #muglove23 parcel tomorrow!

batsy That's a super cute mug 😍 2y
LeahBergen Archive Moles! Perfect name. 👏👏 2y
merelybookish @batsy Thanks! It's a favourite. 2y
merelybookish @LeahBergen Agreed! I'd love to be one too. 🙂 2y
Centique Omg that mug is so gorgeous! 2y
67 likes5 comments
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quietlycuriouskate
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Pickpick

Dystopia? Straight-up horror, more like! Artists and writers who persist in creating are maimed (like some kind of Dantean contrapasso); people who live alone are forced to relocate to windowless, doorless communal "retreats" where the TV is always on; those who show emotion are "cured"; mindless cruelty to animals... thank goodness this disorienting novella in connected stories wasn't any longer 'cause it's given me the heebie-jeebies, big time!

Bookwomble I read this earlier in the year and thought it was fantastic. I got the chills, too 😰 2y
BarbaraBB Intriguing review. I‘ll stack! 2y
37 likes1 stack add2 comments
review
acw
They | Kay Dick
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Pickpick

Ominous! Not outright scary, but enough to keep the pages turning! Rich detail.

2 likes1 stack add
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underground_bks
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Mehso-so

In this lost queer dystopian horror novel from 1977, artists are under surveillance and threat of mutilation from “them,” a mysterious and pervasive mob. Dick is spare on the hard details and character development, but the sense of unease is masterful and in some ways this novella reminded me of the subtlety of Ishiguro‘s Never Let Me Go and the quotidian focus of Atwood‘s Handmaid‘s Tale. Important, but it doesn‘t make for a very satisfying read.

review
Bookwomble
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Pickpick

Think Fahrenheit 451 crossed with, say, The Wicker Man or The Midwich Cuckoos, add a splash of Orwell & a touch of McGooghan's The Prisoner, & that might be close to They.
The overt brutality used by Them is relatively rare, but extreme when used. The menacing feeling of presence and surveillance results in a society which brutalises itself, through suspicion of difference & non-conformity. Artists are most despised for their personal vision, 👇🏼

Bookwomble ... and are increasingly persecuted and 'disappeared'.
The novella takes the form of discrete chapters, a series of vignettes centred on unnamed narrators (who, given certain events, must be more than one person) linked by the slowly developing socio-political setting. Little is explained, but it all feels sadly too comprehensible. The contrast between the idyllic rural settings & the brooding atmosphere of oppression is marvellously handled. 5⭐
3y
BarbaraBB Oooh this sounds very good. 3y
Bookwomble @BarbaraBB It really is 😊 3y
vivastory I'm glad I'm not the only one who felt that this had a John Wyndham vibe👏 2y
35 likes2 stack adds4 comments
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Bookwomble
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Subtitled, "A Sequence of Unease", Dick's '77 dystopian novella won a regional literary prize, & was largely forgotten until its recent republication.
"They" are a group of anti-intellectual demagogues, initially mocked as irrelevant philistines, but who build a base of populist support, resulting in the banning of books, the closure of art galleries, & the rounding up of writers & artists in concentration camps.
Thank goodness it's all fiction ?

25 likes2 stack adds