Main Stream Novels

Confessions of a Crap Artist The Broken Bubble Gather Yourselves Together Humpty Dumpty in Oakland The Man Whose Teeth Were All Exactly Alike Mary and the Giant In Milton Lumky Territory Puttering About in a Small Land Voices from the Street

The Man Whose Teeth Were All Exactly Alike

The Man Whose Teeth Were All Exactly Alike was written by Philip K. Dick in the winter and spring of 1960, in Point Reyes Station, California. In the sequence of Dick’s work, it was written immediately after Confessions of a Crap Artist and just before The Man in the High Castle, the Hugo Award–winning science fiction novel that ushered in the next stage of Dick’s career.

New: Foreign editions of Philip K. Dick books.

American Editions

  • Ziesing 1984 , 223 p, $15.95 (800 copies), hard cover
  • Ziesing 1986, 223 p, $9.95 (3000 copies), trade paperback
  • Tor Books 2009, 304 p, $25.95, hard cover
  • Tor Books 2010, 304 p, $14.95, trade paperback

British Editions

  • Paladin 1986, 256 p, £2.95, trade paperback

Cover Gallery

Philip K. Dick The Man Whose Teeth Were All Exactly Alike cover Philip K. Dick The Man Whose Teeth Were All Exactly Alike cover Philip K. Dick The Man Whose Teeth Were All Exactly Alike cover Philip K. Dick The Man Whose Teeth Were All Exactly Alike cover
Ziesing, 1984Ziesing, 1986Paladin, 1986Gollancz, 2014

Foreign Editions

Back Covers of Books

From the Ziesing edition

The Man Whose Teeth Were All Exactly Alike was written by Philip K. Dick in the winter and spring of 1960, in Point Reyes Station, California. It was written on commission for, but not published by, Harcourt, Brace and Company in New York. Like the ten other mainstream (non-science fiction) novels Dick had written in the previous five years, it went unpublished at the time it was written. In the sequence of Dick's work, The Man Whose Teeth... was written immediately after Confessions of a Crap Artist; the next book Dick wrote after The Man Whose Teeth... was The Man in the High Castle, the Hugo-Award-winning science fiction novel that ushered in the next stage of Dick's career. Paul Williams, Literary Executor, Estate of Philip K. Dick