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The Dice Man (1970s A)

The Dice Man (1970s A)
By Luke Rhinehart

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Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #66042 in Books
  • Published on: 2003-04-07
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 560 pages

Editorial Reviews

Synopsis
Reissued with a cool new jacket as part of the Flamingo 1970s promotion: the cult bestseller that can change your life. If you dare try it...The rules are down to you. The rules that stop you seducing your neighbour downstairs, that stop you hitting your boss, that stop you leaving your family and leaving the country. The rules that stop you living. The dice don't do rules; the dice do life. Luke Rhinehart is a psychiatrist, a husband and a father, his life locked down by routine and order -- until he picks up the dice. The dice govern his every decision and each throw takes him further into a world of risk, discovery and freedom. As the cult of the dice grows around him the old order fades: chance becomes his religion, the dice his god. If you haven't lived the life of the dice, you haven't lived at all. Let the dice decide. And roll with it.


Customer Reviews

A book to die for5
"The Dice Man" was first published in 1971; written by George Cockcroft under the guise of his alter ego, Luke Rhinehart, the book attracted a cult following and has remained a popular - and controversial - work, seen by many as subversive and permissive.

Cockcroft had worked in the mental health field in the USA, obtaining his doctorate in psychology from Columbia, then taught English and psychology before becoming a full-time writer with the success of "The Dice Man". Marketed with the subheading, 'This book can change your life', it poses as a work of non-fiction, apparently written as an autobiographical insight by successful New York psychoanalyst, Luke Rhinehart. Rhinehart reflects on his successes and notoriety, the book being presented as a retrospective on his life, an explanation of how he came to discover the dice phenomenon and the major changes to his life occasioned by it.

Inspired by an intriguing happenstance, Rhinehart one day makes a decision. He lists half a dozen options then rolls the die to decide which one he should follow. The result pushes his boundaries and opens up a new set of experiences. Bit by bit, he hands his life over to decisions made by roll of the die. The result is a hilarious, amoral rampage of a novel as he infects others with his ideas and injects a pattern of chaos into the chaotic order of his urbane, successful world.

Rhinehart pushes the boundaries to extremes and beyond. It contrasts with Cockroft's own dicing lifestyle - he says he started rolling dice to break down his shyness and stuffiness as an academically inclined teenager. He saw rolling a die as a means to break away from habit and reformulate himself. It wasn't until he was teaching psychology that he posed the question to one of his classes, asking them whether the ultimate freedom lay in making all decisions randomly, by throw of the die. Thus were sown the seeds of "The Dice Man".

Written at a fast pace, the novel swings back and forth between first person and third person perspectives, pasting together material apparently drawn from a variety of sources and maintaining the fiction that it is, in reality, a piece of fact - a confessional written by a notorious pillar of the anti-psychiatry movement.

The novel is a savage indictment of psychoanalysis and the therapy culture, and some of the funniest moments are where he debunks the role of the shrink, presenting it as the imposition of a set of subjective, professional values and interpretations rather than any healing or liberation of the individual. Psychoanalysis is presented as enforced dependency, the individual dancing to the tune of the therapist's cash register and ego.

Cockcroft says he feels that use of dice is a means of challenging the ego, of allowing experimentation with self. People are desperate for change, are never satisfied with what they've got or who they are, but they are trapped by their own habits and constrained thinking.

The die provides a series of windows into another you, another life. He famously argued that we should, everyday, make a conscious decision to tell one lie - he's not encouraging deceit in order to harm others, but an acting out of fantasy, taking your conscious self into new areas where you are forced to live by your wits and think, thereby giving you a new perspective on yourself and your identity.

Life too easily becomes a set of habits, a pattern of routines. Cockroft insists that life is too precious to just allow it to drift, to allow habit to dictate, making the same decision again and again. More dangerously, he feels, we can become slaves to our perceptions of morality and order. He believes that religious certainties are highly dangerous - we cannot allow individuals to impose on us their specific view of what their god is supposed to have said, we cannot allow people to present morality and belief as a set of textbook certainties which demand blind obedience and adherence.

Though the hero of the book is male, and some of the female characters appear only to serve male fantasies and needs, Cockroft insists that women are more subservient to roles than are males - there is greater social pressure on them to conform to more limited roles, to fill specific stereotypes. They therefore have a greater need, and greater opportunity to break the mold - though doing so may provoke greater criticism.

Reading "The Dice Man" may not change your life, but its ribald, explicit amorality should make you laugh ... and will hopefully make you think. This is not a bland novel, one which can be treated with indifference. It will outrage some, it will intrigue others, it might inspire ... you might even find yourself looking in the toy cupboard for a set of dice. A very funny book, very 70's, but with the ability to reach down the years and still amuse, it remains a passionate indictment of psychoanalysis and the therapy culture, and should be compulsory reading for anyone following a psychology, social work, or medical course.

Classy pulp classic5
This was recommended to me after I read/saw Fight Club and went through most of Chuck Palanuik's books, which were mostly filled with the kind of social commentary that would terrify even the most relaxed governments and politicians. On opening this book, I had no idea what to expect.

From the off, Rhinehart's detailed style is fanatastic. His character building is flawless; there isn't one useless, throwaway stereotype in here (apart from maybe Arturo X) and most have a major part to play. The opening scene at the breakfast table is the picture of normality, but every chapter in the book is related with genuine brilliance.

The book's strongpoint, however, is the way the writing style constantly changes to reflect the increasingly random acts that (the autobiographical character) Rhinehart finds himself involved in. Sure, the philosophy is long-winded in places, but bloody fascinating all the same; at other times it can be laugh-out-loud funny. The best part of the early half of book finds Rhinehart relating the role of the dice to a religious virgin in order to get into her pants, while slowly getting her tanked with drink (the die told him to).

The acts at first are quite low-key (well, as much as crawling too work in a tuxedo can be), but later on Rhinehart trusts the dice with total control. When the police get involved later on the book, the dialogue in the interview rooms is hilarious as Rhinehart attempts to justify his actions.

This is a book full with social commentary and just as chaotic and anarchic as Fight Club. Bearing in mind this was the tale end of the 70's, it must have been truly groundbreaking back then; however this book still holds total relevance in today's society. In fact, certain cults in the US have already sprung up in testament to the book's philosophy: the total destruction of the personality (or just being insane).

Funny, subversive and yes, even random, I have no doubt in recommending this as a cult classic. I *dare* you to live life by the dice for a week...

10/10

SDL

This book will change your life, you better believe it!5
Quite simply the best book I have read in a long, long time. Combines the rational thought of most human beings with the "don't give a shit," attitude we would all like to use, sometimes.

How many of us have been sat in work on a dreary, wet Thursday afternoon and looked out the window and thought, "there has to be something different to this," or thought of just getting up from where you're sat and walking off on some adventure.

Well, Luke Rhinehardt takes his boundaries and pushes them as far as he can. Admittedly he does go a little far with some, but it does show that we really are trained into a certain train of thought however free we actually believe ourselves to be. There are things we would all like to do, good and bad, and Luke Rhinehardt explores these avenues of the human condition.

Everyone should read this book, and I dare anyone to read it and not make at least one major decision using the die.

Even though Luke Rhinehardt is a fictional character it could be you or I, and you will see what I mean when you read the book.

So go on, pick up the die, roll it, if it's a 1,2 or 3 then you will buy the book now and start reading it, if it's a 4 or 5 you will leave it for one year exactly and roll again. If it's a six you get out of your chair now, go to your bosses house or office and cut off each one of his thumbs with a blunt letter opener. Remember now, don't roll that die if you're not willing to do as it says.

Remember, the die is your friend, keep it safe.