Books that have won the Philip K. Dick Award, given annually since 1982 by the Philadelphia Science Fiction Society for Best Original SF Paperback.
Philip K. Dick Award Public
Created by Phil in SF
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Phil in SF says: 1983 winner
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The Anubis Gates by Tim Powers
5 stars
An ancient Egyptian sorcerer, a modern millionaire, a body-switching werewolf, a hideously deformed clown, a young woman disguised as a …
Phil in SF says: 1984 winner
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4 stars
The first of William Gibson's 'Sprawl' trilogy, Neuromancer is the classic cyberpunk novel.
More information on the [novel's official page][1]. …
Phil in SF says: 1985 winner
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Dinner At Deviant's Palace by Tim Powers
A generation after the bombs wiped out Los Angeles (alone with most of the rest of the world) survivors have …
Phil in SF says: 1986 winner
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Homunculus by James P. Blaylock (Langdon St. Ives, #1)
In the darkest recesses of a London alleyway, the mad hunchback Narbondo and his misanthropic assistant Pule bring the dead …
Phil in SF says: 1987 winner
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Strange Toys by Patricia Geary
Pet is her name. At nine, she is struggling to protect her family from the horrors predicted in her strange …
Phil in SF says: 1988 winner
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Four Hundred Billion Stars by Paul J. McAuley
The sleeper wakes . . .
A million years ago, a powerful alien species moved a dead planet into the …
Phil in SF says: 1989 winner
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Wetware by Rudy Rucker (Ware Tetralogy, #2)
The 2030 All-Meat Bopper!
Fair is fair. First the humans built the Boppers . . . then the Boppers built …
Phil in SF says: 1989 co-winner
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Subterranean Gallery by Richard Paul Russo
San Francisco was turning into a jungle—more and more people living in cars, more and more mobs roaming the streets, …
Phil in SF says: 1990 winner
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Points of Departure by Pat Murphy
Pat Murphy is one of the most powerful and accomplished new writers of imaginative fiction this decade has produced. Her …
Phil in SF says: 1991 winner
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King of Morning, Queen of Day by Ian McDonald
In the myth-ridden hills of Ireland, three generations of young women struggle to tame the ancient magical powers that course …
Phil in SF says: 1992 winner
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Through the Heart by Richard Grant
A monstrous vehicle called the Oasis moves inexorably across the wasteland. A human hive that symbolizes sanctuary, it dispenses a …
Phil in SF says: 1993 winner
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Elvis is God.
The world has gone to hell.
Welcome to a waking nightmare, a future that has sold its …
Phil in SF says: 1994 co-winner
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Growing Up Weightless by John M. Ford
From one of science fiction's most eloquent voices, award-winning writer John M. Ford, comes an evocative novel of a lost …
Phil in SF says: 1994 co-winner
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Phil in SF says: 1995 winner