The Search for the Dice Man
3/5
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About this ebook
The sequel to the cult classic The Dice Man, available in e-book format for the first time.
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.
Luke Rhinehart
Between his two Dice Man titles, Luke Rhinehart wrote three other acclaimed novels: Matari, Long Voyage Back and Adventures of Wim. He is also the author of seven screenplays, several based on his own novels, and currently resides in the United States.
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Reviews for The Search for the Dice Man
62 ratings5 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This sequel sees Larry Rhinehart settled in Wall Street working on the Stock Market. Settled with the bosses daughter and the new VP in his department - all due to him taking no risks. Every buy and sell is calculated, every part of his romance is worked out. Chance does not even get a look over the window sill.That is until he decides to track down his father after two FBI agents come asking if he has been in touch. He arrives at Lukedom to find his real self and a wish from his father for him to carry on the dice flame. He changes from cool and calculating to dice rolling chance taker and starts to see that, as long as the die do not rule him, this could work out to his advantage. It takes out the emotions of certain decisions and the indecision out of others.This second book is better than the first...the diary references from Luke Rhinehart are unnecessary though. The story holds up well and is a lot more fun than the first book. If you read the first one then you will enjoy this as it is more of the same. If you pick this book up first - don't - put it down and go back to the beginning as there are people involved in the story now who you will only get to know in the first book.Go on roll a dice if it lands on an odd number read the books. Even pick something else instead - live by the dice!!!!
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5The sequel to the cult novel The Dice Man sadly is but a pale imitation of the original, which to be frank, wasn't all that great in the first place. Twenty years after Luke took up the dice and disappeared, his son goes on a search for him and becomes involved in using a throw of the dice to determine his future. Ho hum.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Um. Yeah not bad. I loved the first book and I think it opens the mind to some important questions - also good to reflect on our own motivations for doing things. This book focused more on the concept of giving up decisions to chance. It's set about 20 years on from the first and follows Luke's son Larry - who has rejected everything his father developed in dice therapy but strangely gets drawn in to dice life in the search for his father. It goes much more into the idea that our "self" is determined by the roles we fulfil and that these are a construct of society. By letting chance decide the roles we play, we destroy the self and discover freedom and happiness. That's the theory anyway. Not sure how much is meant to be a serious examination of the nature of self and how much is a wry, tongue in cheek look at psychotherapeutic quackery. A good and interesting read though and also worth thinking about if your getting a bit bored of yourself and feel like taking a chance on something (although maybe not on the anarchic scale of the story). Interesting that religious parallels are drawn in the book as it brought to mind that God-awful Surrender book that I half read and reviewed earlier. This was thankfully ironic as opposed to Surrender's earnest devotion to giving up one's will to the way of God! Same concept in a way though.
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5Having loved The Dice Man, I was deeply disappointed by this substandard offering from Rhineheart. If you loved the first book, I suggest you avoid this one: it has no real twists, surprises, humour or commentary on the nature of the self which is not executed in a far superior manner there.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I wanted to criticise this book. The story arc was obvious within the first few pages and I expected at that point to dislike the sidestepping of the moral problems surrounding the original Dice Man. Even though that still happened, the book was fun, engaging, so well written that I could turn off the more critical of my faculties and just enjoy a nice adventure.Having enjoyed the premise of Dice Man, this sequel picks up some 20 odd years later with the original protagonist's son as the hero. Larry Rhineheart might be a profit seeking banker archetype but he delivers a narrative that keeps up a great pace and could be read with or without prior knowledge of Dice Man.There are some negatives that might irk others more - Larry's original position as sceptic of diceliving and having been personally impacted by the lack of responsibility that the 60s hippy community fostered is never really followed through. To a great extent, Larry's role is to question the dicelife in a way that ultimately expects the reader to support Rhineheart's concept. The moral issues that are raised early are worn away by the repeated successes that the dice bring and this allows the author to sidestep the key problems.Rhineheart also rages against the excesses of the commercialised world. At the time I am reviewing this book, these excesses have been brought much more sharply into relief. This is a little hard to swallow given that the diceman concept is itself intensely ego-driven. The repeated discussion of relinquishing the ego, the allusions to eastern mysticism and the hippy belief system show that the author has failed to recognise the core weakness of focussing on the self. Rules exist to constrain people's actions in a way intended to limit the harm inflicted on others. Rhineheart does not understand this fundamental of social interaction.The author also continues to struggle with female characters. They were not a strong point in Dice Man and are equally weak here. Still, from a clearly male perspective it is obvious from the outset that Kim is the woman a man wants and not Honoria.Despite all that, I still give this a strong thumbs up. I was entertained throughout and could gloss over the flaws. The author knows how to write engaging excess and definitely appeals to the self-indulgant side of a reader. Larry Rhineheart's character might not always make complete sense but he is endearing to the point that I did genuinely want him to win.After I had gotten into the swing of the book, even the archetypal characters began to be fun. The dice world might be too black and white but a lot of those involved have a great time. That enjoyment is infectious and it is uplifting. I don't agree with the philosophy but I enjoyed it all tremendously.