Confessions of a Crap Artist has successfully inspired me to pursue PKD's other non-science fiction novels. It possesses the perfect mix of heart, humor, tragedy, and social reflection with some of the same themes and topics as Dick's science fiction. The only non-science fiction novel of Dick I had read prior to tackling this engaging novel of Jack, his sister, and his brother-in-law in rural Marin County, was The Transmigration of Timothy Archer. Here, however, we are treated to country life in Marin County (with occasional trips to San Francisco and the Bay Area) and the likely OCD Jack Isidore, who resembles several protagonists in the oeuvre of PKD (mentally ill, socially awkward, working odd jobs, dominated by a woman). His willingness to hear out any idea, apply it to his scientific method, and focus on what is real (or, eternal) separates him from his sister, Fay, her husband, Charley, and the young man Fay eventually has an affair with, Nat Anteil.
Along the way, we are treated to a series of events told from the perspective of the aforementioned characters, posing deep questions about the meaning of marriage, family, free will, loyalty, love, and mental illness. And much like the dream house Charley and Fay build in rural Marin County, each of them fall for something that brings more problems than expected. Tragically (and hilariously), Jack falls into a UFO cult that believes the end of the world will occur near the end of April 1959, but he's possibly the most sane and selfless individual in the novel, suggesting some of the profound religious and spiritual themes of PKD's later work. Both in his willingness to believe and his service for the animals on Charley and Fay's property (plus taking care of their daughters), Jack by far possesses the most redeeming qualities. For a portrait of life in 1950s California, plus seeing Dick's other themes and ideas in realist fiction, this is essential.
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