Learn more
These promotions will be applied to this item:
Some promotions may be combined; others are not eligible to be combined with other offers. For details, please see the Terms & Conditions associated with these promotions.
Audiobook Price: $17.50$17.50
Save: $10.01$10.01 (57%)
Your Memberships & Subscriptions

Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required.
Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.
Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.
The Crack in Space Kindle Edition
The discovery of mysterious gateway leads to a new world full of dangerous possibilities in this science fiction tale from an iconic author.
When a repairman accidentally finds a parallel universe, everyone sees it as an opportunity, whether as a way to ease Earth’s overcrowding, set up a personal kingdom, or hide an inconvenient mistress. But when a civilization is found already living there, the people on this side of the crack are sent scrambling to discover their motives. Will these parallel humans come in peace, or are they just as corrupt and ill-intentioned as the people of this world?
“Dick’s best books always describe a future that is both entirely recognizable and utterly unimaginable.”—The New York Times Book ReviewCustomers who bought this item also bought
Editorial Reviews
Review
From the Trade Paperback edition.
From the Back Cover
"Dick s best books always describe a future that is both entirely recognizable and utterly unimaginable." The New York Times Book Review
When a repairman accidentally discovers a parallel universe, everyone sees it as an opportunity, whether as a way to ease Earth s overcrowding, set up a personal kingdom, or hide an inconvenient mistress. But when a civilization is found already living there, the people on this side of the crack are sent scrambling to discover their motives. Will these parallel humans come in peace, or are they just as corrupt and ill-intentioned as the people of this world?
Over a career that spanned three decades, Philip K. Dick (1928 1982) wrote 121 short stories and 45 novels, establishing himself as one of the most visionary authors of the twentieth century. His work is included in the Library of America and has been translated into more than twenty-five languages. Eleven works have been adapted to film, including Blade Runner (based on Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?), Total Recall, Minority Report, and A Scanner Darkly.
"
About the Author
One of the greatest authors of the 20th century, with a career spanning 3 decades and 36 science fiction novels and 121 short stories. Eleven novels and short stories have been adapted to film; notably: Blade Runner, Total Recall, Minority Report, and A Scanner Darkly. Dick won the Hugo Award in 1963 and was inducted into the SF Hall of Fame in 2005, and in 2007 he was the first science fiction to be published by the Library of America.
Nick Podehl has been named a "Best Voice" by AudioFile magazine in 2010 and 2011. He has narrated many young adult, fantasy, and romance titles, several of which have won awards, and has appeared in a number of theatrical productions and independent films.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
The young couple, black-haired, dark-skinned, probably Mexican or Puerto Rican, stood nervously at Herb Lackmore's counter and the boy, the husband, said in a low voice, 'Sir, we want to be put to sleep. We want to become bibs.'
Rising from his desk, Lackmore walked to the counter and although he did not like Cols -- there seemed to be more of them every month, coming into his Oakland branch office of the U.S. Department on Special Public Welfare -- he said in a pleasant tone of voice designed to reassure the two of them, 'Have you thought it over carefully, folks? It's a big step. You might be out for, say, a few hundred years. Have you shopped for any professional advice about this?'
The boy, glancing at his wife, swallowed and murmured, 'No, sir. We just decided between us. Neither of us can get a job and we're about to be evicted from our dorm. We don't even own a wheel, and what can you do without a wheel? You can't go anywhere. You can't even look for work.' He was not a bad-looking boy, Lackmore noticed. Possibly eighteen, he still wore the coat and trousers which were army-separation issue. The girl had long hair; she was quite small, with black, bright eyes and a delicately-formed almost doll-like face. She never ceased watching her husband.
'I'm going to have a baby,' the girl blurted.
'Aw, the heck with both of you,' Lackmore said in disgust, drawing his breath in sharply. 'You both get right out of here.'
Ducking their heads guiltily the boy and his wife turned and started from Lackmore's office, back outside onto the busy downtown early-morning Oakland, California street.
'Go see an abort-consultant!' Lackmore called after them irritably. He resented having to help them, but obviously someone had to; look at the spot they had gotten themselves into. Because no doubt they were living on a government military pension, and if the girl was pregnant the pension would automatically be withdrawn.
Plucking hesitantly at the sleeve of his wrinkled coat the Col boy said, 'Sir, how do we find an abort-consultant?'
The ignorance of the dark-skinned strata, despite the government's ceaseless educational campaigns. No wonder their women were often preg. 'Look in the phone book,' Lackmore said. 'Under abortionists, therapeutic. Then the subsection advisors. Got it?'
'Yes, sir. Thank you.' The boy nodded rapidly.
'Can you read?'
'Yes. I stayed in school until I was thirteen.' On the boy's face fierce pride showed; his black eyes gleamed.
Lackmore returned to reading his homeopape; he did not have any more time to offer gratis. No wonder they wanted to become bibs. Preserved, unchanged, in a government warehouse, year after year, until -- would the labor market ever improve? Lackmore personally doubted it, and he had been around a long time; he was ninety-five years old, a jerry. In his time he had put to sleep thousands of people, almost all of them, like this couple, young. And -- dark.
The door of the office shut. The young couple had gone again as quietly as they had come.
Sighing, Lackmore began to read once more the pape's article on the divorce trial of Lurton D. Sands, Jr, the most sensational event now taking place; as always, he read every word of it avidly.
This day began for Darius Pethel with vidphone calls from irate customers wanting to know why their Jiffi-scuttlers hadn't been fixed. Any time now, he told them soothingly, and hoped that Erickson was already at work in the service department of Pethel Jiffi-scuttler Sales & Service.
As soon as he was off the vidphone Pethel searched among the litter on his desk for the day's copy of U.S. Business Report; he of course kept abreast of all the economic developments on the planet. This alone set him above his employees; this, his wealth, and his advanced age.
'What's it say?' his salesman, Stu Hadley, asked, standing in the office doorway, robant magnetic broom in hand, pausing in his activity.
Silently, Pethel read the major headline.
EFFECTS ON THE NATION'S BUSINESS
COMMUNITY OF A NEGRO PRESIDENT
And there, in 3-D, animated, was a pic of James Briskin; the pic came to life, Candidate Briskin smiled in miniature, as Pethel pressed the tab beneath it. The Negro's mustache-obscured lips moved and above his head a balloon appeared, filled with the words he was saying.
My first task will be to find an equitable disposition of the tens of millions of sleeping.
'And dump every last bib back on the labor market,' Pethel murmured, releasing the word tab. 'If this guy gets in, the nation's ruined.' But it was inevitable. Sooner or later, there would be a Negro president; after all, since the Event of 1993 there had been more Cols than Caucs.
Gloomily, he turned to page two for the latest on the Lurton Sands scandal; maybe that would cheer him up, the political news being so bad. The famous org-trans surgeon had become involved in a sensational contested divorce suit with his equally famous wife Myra, the abort-consultant. All sorts of juicy details were beginning to filter out, charges on both sides. Dr Sands, according to the homeopapes, had a mistress; that was why Myra had stomped out, and rightly so. Not like the old days, Pethel thought, recalling his youth in the late decades of the twentieth century. Now it was 2080 and public -- and private -- morality had worsened.
Why would Dr Sands want a mistress anyhow, Pethel wondered, when there's that Golden Door Moments of Bliss satellite passing overhead every day? They say there're five thousand girls to choose from.
He, himself, had never visited Thisbe Olt's satellite; he did not approve of it, nor did very many jerries -- it was too radical a solution to the overpopulation problem, and seniors, by letter and telegram, had fought its passage in Congress back in '72. But the bill had gone through anyhow . . . probably, he reflected, because most Congressmen had the idea of taking a jet'ab up there themselves. And no doubt regularly did, now.
'If we whites stick together--' Hadley began.
'Listen,' Pethel said, 'that time has passed. If Briskin can dispose of the bibs, more power to him; personally, it keeps me awake at night, thinking of all those people, most of them just kids, lying in those gov warehouses year after year. Look at the talent going to waste. It's -- bureaucratic! Only a swollen socialist government would have dreamed up a solution like that.' He eyed his salesman harshly. 'If you hadn't gotten this job with me, even you might--'
Hadley interrupted quietly, 'But I'm white.'
Reading on further, Pethel saw that Thisbe Olt's satellite had grossed a billion U.S. dollars in 2079. Wow, he said to himself. That's big business. Before him was a pic of Thisbe; with cadmium-white hair and little high conical breasts she was a superb sight, an aesthetic as well as a sexual treat. The pic showed her serving male guests of her satellite a tequila sour -- an added fillip because tequila, being derived from the mescal plant, had long been illegal on Earth proper.
Pethel touched the word tab of Thisbe's pic and at once Thisbe's eyes sparkled, her head turned, her stable, dense breasts vibrated subtly, and in the balloon above her head the proper words formed.
Embarrassing personal urgency, Mr American businessman? Do as many doctors recommend: visit my Golden Door!
It was an ad, Pethel discovered. Not an informative article.
'Excuse me.' A customer had entered the store and Hadley moved in his direction.
Oh lord, Darius Pethel thought as he recognized the customer. Don't we have his 'scuttler fixed yet? He rose to his feet, knowing that he would be personally needed to appease the man; this was Dr Lurton Sands, and because of his recent domestic troubles he had become, of late, demanding and hot-tempered.
'Yes, Doctor,' Pethel said, walking toward him. 'What can I do for you today?' As if he didn't know. Trying to fight off Myra as well as keep his mistress, Cally Vale, Dr Sands had enough problems; he really needed the use of his Jiffi-scuttler. Unlike other customers it was not going to be possible to put this man off.
Plucking by reflex at his great handlebar mustache, presitial candidate Jim Briskin said tentatively, 'We're in a rut, Sal. I ought to fire you. You're trying to make me out the epitome of the Cols and yet you know I've spent twenty years playing up to the white power structure. Frankly, I think we'd have better luck trying to get the white vote, not the dark. I'm used to them; I can appeal to them.'
'You're wrong,' his campaign manager, Salisbury Heim, said. 'Your appeal -- listen and understand this, Jim -- is to the dark kid and his wife scared to death their only prospect is winding up bibs in some gov warehouse. "Bottled in bond," as they say. In you these people see...'
'But I feel guilty.'
'Why?' Sal Heim demanded.
'Because I'm a fake. I can't close the Dept of SPW warehouses; you know that. You got me to promise, and ever since I've been sweating my life away trying to conceive how it could be done. And there isn't any way.' He examined his wristwatch; one quarter-hour remained before he had to give his speech. 'Have you read the speech Phil Danville wrote for me?' He reached into his disorganized, lumpy coat-pouch.
'Danville!' Heim's face convulsed. 'I thought you got rid of him; give me that.' He grabbed the folded sheets and began going over them. 'Danville is a nut. Look.' He waved the first sheet in Jim Briskin's face. 'According to him, you're going to ban traffic from the U.S. to Thisbe's satellite. That's insane! If the Golden Door is closed, the birth rate will jump back up again where it was -- what then? How does Danville manage to counter that?'
After a pause Briskin said, 'The Golden Door is immoral.'
Spluttering, Heim said, 'Sure. And animals should wear pants.'
'There's just got to be a bette...
Product details
- ASIN : B005LVR6UK
- Publisher : Mariner Books; Reissue edition (January 24, 2012)
- Publication date : January 24, 2012
- Language : English
- File size : 10.9 MB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 223 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #333,648 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #346 in Metaphysical Fiction
- #418 in Metaphysical Science Fiction eBooks
- #705 in Colonization Science Fiction eBooks
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

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 toward 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. The recipient of critical acclaim and numerous awards throughout his career, Dick was inducted into the Science Fiction Hall of Fame in 2005, and in 2007 the Library of America published a selection of his novels in three volumes. His work has been translated into more than twenty-five languages.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find this science fiction book to be a highly recommended quick read with a fast-paced narrative and great writing. They appreciate its imagination, with one customer noting how it explores unforseen possibilities, and another mentioning how it makes them ponder alternate realities. The book receives positive feedback for its style, with one review noting it's very representative of Philip K. Dick's work. While the storyline and pacing are well-received, some customers express concerns about character development, with one mentioning characters dropping out of the novel abruptly.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Select to learn more
Customers find the book highly readable and entertaining, describing it as a quick read that's sufficiently engaging, with one customer noting it's interesting enough for a long holiday drive.
"...I found it a quick and enjoyable read which had me pondering alternate realities." Read more
"...A highly recommended quick read!" Read more
"...But even so, it's compelling in the way Dick can often be, as he zeroes in on this parallel world..." Read more
""The Crack In Space" by Philip K. Dick is an extraordinary, imaginative, and original, storyline and is a sci/fi mystery that will hold in..." Read more
Customers enjoy the storyline of the book, with one customer noting its parallels with politics, though another finds it rambling with derivative motifs.
"...It's readable and intriguing, as always, but it's a novel more for Dick completionists than for casual fans...." Read more
"...; by Philip K. Dick is an extraordinary, imaginative, and original, storyline and is a sci/fi mystery that will hold in thrall...." Read more
"...writing style is typical PKD which I consider good, the premise for the story is solid, but towards the end it is lacking...." Read more
"...The author ties these aspects together nicely to make a decent story...." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's imagination, with one customer noting how it explores unforseen possibilities and another mentioning how it makes readers ponder alternate realities.
"...enjoy about reading Dick's work is that he poses interesting, thoughtful questions rooted in an understanding of human nature...." Read more
"The Crack in Space is a funny, thoughtful, prophetic novella about a tear in space caused by a less than ethical transplant surgeon's personal..." Read more
"...and the narative allows itself to meander and explore unforseen possibilities...." Read more
""The Crack In Space" by Philip K. Dick is an extraordinary, imaginative, and original, storyline and is a sci/fi mystery that will hold in..." Read more
Customers appreciate the writing style of the book.
"...It's readable and intriguing, as always, but it's a novel more for Dick completionists than for casual fans...." Read more
"...Brilliantly written with superb pacing, verbiage, and action throughout...." Read more
"...Unfortunately it feels like that. The writing style is typical PKD which I consider good, the premise for the story is solid, but towards the end..." Read more
"Arrived in excellent new condition. Softcover and easy to read with one hand...." Read more
Customers appreciate the pacing of the book.
"...I found it a quick and enjoyable read which had me pondering alternate realities." Read more
"...Brilliantly written with superb pacing, verbiage, and action throughout...." Read more
"Great writing, fast paced, and with fully developed characters." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's style, with one noting it is very representative of the author's work, while another mentions it provides a fresh perspective.
"...though, what I really enjoy about reading Dick's work is that he poses interesting, thoughtful questions rooted in an understanding of human nature...." Read more
"...I still think this is a good book, very representative of his style and imagination, but weak in execution." Read more
"...Gives a whole new look at at what could of been and may be." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the character development in the book, with one customer finding it lacking and another noting issues with characters dropping out of the story abruptly.
"...a bit all over the map, with interesting ideas and characters dropping out of the novel abruptly, an ending that feels vague and too open-ended, and..." Read more
"...Interesting premise, but without good characters, you lose me." Read more
"...The political issues are great but there are too many caracters to follow." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews. Please reload the page.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 7, 2016The Crack in Space posits our world about 2080 (which, at the time it was published, would have been over 100 years in the future): there is severe overpopulation, to the extent that many young people are choosing to be cryogenically frozen until the labor market is better. It's an election year, and there's a black presidential nominee for the first time ever. That nominee, Jim Briskin, is struggling in his campaign until he's tipped off about some major news: there's been a rift discovered to a whole new world...one that looks like it will support human life. Briskin seizes on this development to announce that it will be his platform to thaw out the frozen and give them this world to settle, and his opponent jockeys to match his promises, when it's revealed that the new world is populated after all, but not by people as we know them. Instead it's Peking man that survived. So now what?
That's maybe half the plot of this slim volume (it's about 200 pages long), but it's the main one. First of all, let me say that I'm glad that we beat out Dick's predictions and had our first black president 75 years ahead of schedule. Moving on from that, though, what I really enjoy about reading Dick's work is that he poses interesting, thoughtful questions rooted in an understanding of human nature. As much as we might think that if we discovered a parallel Earth we'd learn from our past and thoughtfully go about exploration and potential colonization, the reality is that in an election year, politicians would be falling all over each other to posture and secure an important position for themselves. If the world's population was so huge that abortion wasn't just widespread but encouraged, that people were freezing themselves in hopes of a better life someday, it would absolutely end up with people getting sent through the door/portal/whatever without much in the way of an actual plan while news cameras flashed and the powers that be congratulated themselves on a job well done. Maybe I'm a little cynical (I was a litigator and now I'm a lobbyist, so that probably comes with the territory), but I feel like Dick gets how people would actually behave instead of how they'd prefer to imagine they would. I found it a quick and enjoyable read which had me pondering alternate realities.
- Reviewed in the United States on October 7, 2024The Crack in Space is a funny, thoughtful, prophetic novella about a tear in space caused by a less than ethical transplant surgeon's personal teleportation device. The tear opens up on an alternate Earth populated by the dominant human species: H. erectus pekinensis. With millions of earthlings in suspended animation due to unemployment, this alter-Earth is seen as the go to planet for colonization.
Peking man has a different idea.
Written in 1966 (originally appearing in the July 1964 Magazine of Science Fiction and Fantasy under the title Cantata 140), the story includes a man vying to become the first black President, and an orbiting brothel owner whose pronouns are they/them.
A highly recommended quick read!
- Reviewed in the United States on July 29, 2019
3.0 out of 5 stars Compelling ideas, as ever, but it's ultimately a book for PKD completionists only
It's somewhat unusual to find Philip K. Dick being as overtly political as he is in The Crack in Space; after all, Dick is mainly known for his more philosophical and cosmological ideas, and less for his direct commentaries on the world around him (even though the influence of the times is fairly evident in his work). And yet, The Crack in Space is about the first African-American candidate for president, and just what it would take for America to overcome racial prejudice in order to consider electing a non-white man to the highest office of the land.
Even if Dick was too conservative in his timeline in how long it would take the country to do that, his ideas here about what it would take are strong ones. There's overpopulation, a younger generation that feels there's no place for them in society, and concern about employment, all of which contributes to the economic anxiety of the country. Oh, and there's also a gateway to a parallel universe that might provide an answer to all of this - if, that is, we could just figure out what keeps happening to our explorers over there.
As with any Dick novel, The Crack in Space has ideas to spare, but unlike his best work, they don't entirely flow together all that well. Indeed, The Crack in Space feels a bit all over the map, with interesting ideas and characters dropping out of the novel abruptly, an ending that feels vague and too open-ended, and too many themes that don't quite coalesce. But even so, it's compelling in the way Dick can often be, as he zeroes in on this parallel world (one that turns out to be a sequel to one of my favorite Dick short stories, "Prominent Author") or plays around with a pair of twins with a most unusual shared attribute. It's readable and intriguing, as always, but it's a novel more for Dick completionists than for casual fans.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 29, 2024Crammed, unsurprisingly, with volatile and bewildering ideas, this is solidly mid-60s PKD. The premise is unexpected (somewhat pulpy but handled in a way that’s more metaphysical and philosophical than via the lens of hard sci-fi), and the narative allows itself to meander and explore unforseen possibilities. Per usual for this era of Dick’s writing, it’s not the “story” that stands out as much as it is the halucinatory atmosphere and stream of interesting musings about life / experience. It’s a fascinating and somewhat unweildy combination.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 29, 2014"The Crack In Space" by Philip K. Dick is an extraordinary, imaginative, and original, storyline and is a sci/fi mystery that will hold in thrall. Brilliantly written with superb pacing, verbiage, and action throughout. the alternative world building is quite simply delicious to read about and ponder, and the characterizations are truly unique and intriguing. I loved this story by one of the masters in the sci/fi genre and is a must read by aficionado's of his incredible imagination. 5 stars!!!!!
Top reviews from other countries
- Matthew HaynesReviewed in the United Kingdom on May 18, 2017
4.0 out of 5 stars A fun allegorical sci-fi tale about race relations
The Crack in Space features some interesting stuff about America’s first black (or as they put it in the book ‘col’) president – a rather outlandish idea back in the Sixties no doubt – and a portal to a parallel earth populated by a race of early men called sinathropus or Peking Man (a.k.a. Pekes). The twists and turns of the story are very much a commentary on race relations disguised in the envelope of fun sci-fi and an exploration of what PKD thinks it would take for all races of homo sapiens to forget their differences and live in harmony – i.e. a common enemy in the form of the Pekes.
There’s a reverse Zaphod Beeblebrox character who has one head and two bodies who tries to play god to the Pekes and similarities to the Long Earth series by Terry Pratchett and Steve Baxter. As I was reading it, it all seemed rather familiar and I had to check the contents of a couple of novel collections I have to make sure I hadn’t inadvertently already read it. I guess what might have happened is that some bits of the story were included in one of Dick’s short stories that I have read.
Some of the charm of the story is that it shows its age in places with contemporary items such as tapes mentioned and yet includes such things as video conferencing, flying cars, satellites, teleportation, cryogenics and apartment block intercoms. Dick’s forward thinking views on race relations may have seemed overtly liberal to a lot of people back then but are surprisingly normal today. This tells us more about American society in the Sixties than it does about the state of science fiction writing back then I think.
- J. EvansReviewed in the United Kingdom on September 30, 2012
5.0 out of 5 stars Easy but intelligent SF
Compared to some of Dick's more surreal (later) works, this is a 'straight' science-fiction novel. The plot is interesting and it's an easy, quick read. But, of course, there's more going on here for the thoughtful reader who wants to scratch below the surface. I see the book as an allegory of the colonization of the Americas - the 'old' earth and 'new' earth featured here are direct analogies for the Old World and the New World. It explores several aspects of colonization and the motives of those involved: politics, race, money/corporate power, the pressures of overpopulation, individuals hoping for a fresh start, the spirit of exploration and scientific discovery, and so on. You might see the book differently, and that's fine. The point I'm making is that, despite its apparent simplicity, this is smart SF that can be enjoyed on two levels. It might not be counted as one of Dick's classics, but it's well worth reading, whether you're a fan or a newcomer.