Tony and the Beetles by Philip K. Dick Episode #141
Philip K. Dick | November 9, 2023-
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Tony and the Beetles by Philip K. Dick Episode #141
Philip K. Dick
TONY AND THE BEETLES
Episode #141 · Written by Philip K. Dick · Narrated by Scott Miller
Tony Rossi thinks he’s at home on a dusty colony world — until long-buried rage and a turning tide of war make the friendly streets alien. When a playdate becomes a fight for survival, childhood innocence collides with century-old grudges.
On its surface, Tony and the Beetles reads like a child’s day on a frontier world: ten-year-old Tony Rossi wakes under reddish sunlight, straps on boots and helmet, and heads for Karnet to play and tinker with his friends’ model spaceport. Philip K. Dick lingers over those domestic details — the canned grapefruit, the family’s strained morning conversation, the EEP obediently obedient — so the shift from normalcy to violence lands hard. Conversation about “the war” at the breakfast table, a hurried market ride, and the casual cruelty of adults are the scaffolding for a sudden, terrible lesson: territory, history, and grievance can explode even in a child’s playground.
Dick uses the Terran-Pas social dynamic to reveal the slow, corrosive effects of occupation and distance. The Pas-udeti are drawn with culture and texture — leathery faces, primitive trucks, a long memory of being pushed back across the stars — and the narrative shows how their pent-up fury, fueled by centuries of dispossession, crystallizes when events shift against the Terran invaders. The EEP—Tony’s faithful robotic companion—becomes both symbol and casualty: emblematic of the comforts a colony thinks are permanent, and vulnerable to a crowd’s ferocity. When the Pas children turn hostile and stones and heat beams follow, Dick doesn’t dramatize spectacle for spectacle’s sake; he centers Tony’s confusion, shame, and dawning understanding.
The story is as much about identity as it is about war. Tony’s sense of belonging — born “Terran” on a far world, ingrained with edutapes and a parent’s pride — collides with the reality that the ground beneath him is contested and resented. Family scenes crack open to reveal the emotional geography of empire: pride and denial in Joe Rossi; Leah’s anxious, conciliatory spirit; the brittle bravado of men who long to fight once more. At the same time, Pas characters like B’prith and Llyre are not flat antagonists; they embody communal memory and the moral logic of those reclaiming what was once theirs.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Philip K. Dick’s voice here is economical but sharp: small domestic details are rendered lovingly, while the larger political sweep is implied through reactions, overheard broadcasts, and local gossip. The result is a compact, emotionally loaded tale that lives at the intersection of childhood, technology, and the violent consequences of imperial reach.
For readers who appreciate classic science fiction that interrogates power and identity through intimate perspective, Tony and the Beetles is a clear, affecting example — short, propulsive, and morally complicated. It’s a story that makes you feel the social cost of expansion, and it lingers because Tony’s confusion and fear are utterly recognizable.
LISTEN TO THE STORY
Listen to Tony and the Beetles by Philip K. Dick — a tense vintage science fiction tale where a child’s world collides with a long-buried war of reclaiming and revenge.
RELATED STORIES
No writer has shaped The Lost Sci-Fi Podcast more profoundly than Philip K. Dick.
From the very beginning, Dick’s uneasy visions have pulsed at the heart of this show. Episode 1 featured The Hanging Stranger, a chilling tale of a corpse swaying in a public square while ordinary citizens hurry past as if nothing is wrong. That opening story set the tone for everything that followed — paranoia in broad daylight, reality bending at the edges, and the quiet suspicion that the world you trust has already been replaced.
Dick’s genius was not in rockets or distant galaxies alone. He brought the strange into living rooms, offices, schoolyards, and suburban streets. In The Father Thing, a young boy becomes convinced his father has been replaced by something wearing his face. Human Is asks whether a man who returns from space truly is the same person — or whether “better” might mean something far more unsettling. Adjustment Team reveals unseen bureaucrats pausing and resetting reality itself while one man accidentally slips between the cracks.
Some stories strike with dark humor. The Eyes Have It turns casual figures of speech into proof of alien invasion. Sales Pitch unleashes a relentless robotic salesman that refuses to take no for an answer. Others cut deeper. Foster, You’re Dead! exposes the fear-driven consumerism of the Cold War era. Breakfast at Twilight drops an unsuspecting family into the aftermath of atomic catastrophe.
Across more than thirty narrated stories, we’ve traveled through Dick’s shifting realities: the eerie colonization of Mars in Tony and the Beetles, the strange evolutionary leap in The Golden Man, the quiet dread of Beyond the Door, the aching nostalgia of Exhibit Piece, and the philosophical unease of The Turning Wheel. Whether he’s writing about android prejudice in James P. Crow, divine intrusion in Upon the Dull Earth, or time paradoxes in The Skull, Dick always returns to one question: what does it mean to be real?
No other author appears more often in our catalog. No other writer has unsettled us so consistently. Explore the stories below and step into the shifting, unstable, unforgettable worlds of Philip K. Dick — the writer who launched this podcast and continues to haunt it.
- The Father Thing by Philip K. Dick
- James P. Crow by Philip K. Dick
- Upon the Dull Earth by Philip K. Dick
- Beyond the Door by Philip K. Dick
- Survey Team by Philip K. Dick
- Souvenir by Philip K. Dick
- Of Withered Apples by Philip K. Dick
- The Hanging Stranger by Philip K. Dick
- Sales Pitch by Philip K. Dick
- Small Town by Philip K. Dick
- Meddler by Philip K. Dick
- The Skull by Philip K. Dick
- Prominent Author by Philip K. Dick
- The Gun by Philip K. Dick
- The Crawlers by Philip K. Dick
- Adjustment Team by Philip K. Dick
- Progeny by Philip K. Dick
- The Golden Man by Philip K. Dick
- Strange Eden by Philip K. Dick
- Tony and the Beetles by Philip K. Dick
- Breakfast at Twilight by Philip K. Dick
- Beyond Lies the Wub by Philip K. Dick
- Piper in the Woods by Philip K. Dick
- Human Is by Philip K. Dick
- Foster, You're Dead! by Philip K. Dick
- Exhibit Piece by Philip K. Dick
- The Turning Wheel by Philip K. Dick
- The Eyes Have It by Philip K. Dick
- The Black Arts by Philip K. Dick
- Santa's Return by Philip K. Dick
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Each episode features carefully selected stories from the Golden Age of science fiction, professionally narrated. Timeless storytelling the way it was meant to be heard.
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