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FREE THE DICE MAN PDF Luke Rhinehart | 560 pages | 01 Mar 2012 | HarperCollins Publishers | 9780006513902 | English | London, United Kingdom The Dice Man by Luke Rhinehart From " Veronica Mars " to Rebecca take a look back at the career of Armie Hammer on The Dice Man off the screen. See the full gallery. Russell Harris travels around Britain using dice to decide The Dice Man path to take. Will he go sea fishing or windboarding? The dice will decide. Looking for something to watch? Choose an adventure below and discover your next favorite movie or TV show. Visit our What to Watch page. Sign In. Keep track of everything you watch; tell your friends. Full Cast and Crew. Release Dates. Official Sites. Company Credits. Technical Specs. Episode List. Plot Summary. Plot Keywords. Parents Guide. External Sites. User Reviews. User Ratings. External Reviews. Metacritic Reviews. Photo Gallery. Trailers and Videos. Crazy Credits. Alternate Versions. Rate This. Episode Guide. Stars: Shaun FentonRussel Harris. Added to Watchlist. The Evolution of Armie Hammer. The Best Documentaries Must see! Share this Rating Title: The Diceman — 8. Use The Dice Man HTML below. You must be a registered user to use the IMDb rating plugin. Episodes Seasons. Photos Add The Dice Man Add an image Do you have any images for this title? Edit Cast Series cast summary: Shaun Fenton Edit Storyline Russell Harris travels around Britain using dice to decide which path to take. Genres: Documentary. Add the first question. Edit Details Official Sites: Official site. Country: UK. Language: English. Color: Color. Edit page. Add episode. October Streaming Picks. Back to School Picks. Clear your history. Self unknown episodes. The Dice Man - IMDb Goodreads helps you keep track of books you want to read. Want to Read saving…. Want to Read Currently Reading Read. Other editions. The Dice Man cover. Error rating book. Refresh and try again. Open Preview See a Problem? Details if other :. Thanks for telling us about the problem. Return to Book Page. The cult classic that can still change your life Let the dice decide! This is the philosophy that changes the life of bored psychiatrist Luke Rhinehart - and in some ways changes the world as well. Because once you hand over your life to the dice, anything can happen. Entertaining, humorous, scary, shocking, subversive, The Dice Man is one of the cult bestsellers of our The cult classic that can still change your life Entertaining, humorous, scary, shocking, subversive, The Dice Man is one of the cult bestsellers of our time. Get A Copy. Paperbackpages. Published by HarperCollins first published More Details Original Title. Luke Rhinehart. United States of America. Other Editions Friend Reviews. To see what your friends thought of this book, please sign up. To ask other readers questions about The Dice Manplease sign up. Hello everyone! I'm directing a documentary that partly uses the diceman's plot. Please The Dice Man me at terrancesenane gmail. See 1 question about The Dice Man…. The Dice Man with This Book. Community Reviews. Showing Average rating 3. Rating details. More filters. Sort The Dice Man. Start your review of The Dice Man. Apr 28, Judith rated it liked it. I let the dice dictate what review I write. My review should be So now I am stuck with having to write a review in rhyme :- But imagine having the dice control your life every single The Dice Man For that is what Dr. Rhinehart in this book sets out to do The dice control what he eats, when he sleeps, when The Dice Man goes to I let the dice dictate what review I write. Rhinehart in this book sets out to do The dice control what he eats, when he sleeps, when he goes to the loo. In his eyes the dice will liberate mankind And though in itself this is quite an interesting find, The book is just too long and has too much sex for The Dice Man taste I would have preferred it shorter and a bit more chaste. So though I enjoyed it and liked the principle idea, Out of 5 this book for me scores only The Dice Man simple 3. View all 12 comments. Sep 19, Hannah Eiseman-Renyard rated it it was ok Shelves: avoid-this20th-century-classicsi-don-t-get-it. Once I started reading I discovered that my friends' explanation of this book made more sense and appealed more than the book itself does. Yes, if you decide to assign random actions to different sides of dice and throw them - you will by your own made up rules have to go do the thing it lands on. But don't you dare lose track of the fact that you're the one who put those six outcomes on that die. You're still in control, stupid. Psychologist narrator decides one day to just play with possibilities. His very first one is "if this die is a one, I'll go rape my neighbour. He does. How very free. I'd been told about this bit, but I'd always assumed it was further along in the book, something dark and disturbing which he builds up to. Also, the neighbour loves it, so it's not really rape. Women The Dice Man always gagging for it, aren't they? Rad, dude. And it's a one- dimensional, pseudo-revolutionary viewpoint with no regard for other human beings. The Dice Man both think that living randomly is awesome. Like, so totally awesome that the narrator throws away most of his established life in the process of following this dumb idea of the roll of the dice. Frustratingly, the plot does light on all my counter-arguments always put forward by the narrator's psychologist colleaguesbut they're always just brushed aside as unhip. Nevermind this square life where you don't rape your neighbours - this dude's living free! They fired him at work? Great: now he can really get on with his work! It's the same dumb TV logic which sees cops only catching the murderer once they're suspended from the case. This book is a big-assed brick of a novel, and if you're not charmed and amused by the narrator, or if you're not into the machismo - yet lack of sense of self ie personality or scruples - which the narrator character enthuses about for most of the book, it's going to be a trudge. I wonder how different my reading of this might have been if I'd read it in social context when it came out in the same year as the Stanford Prison Experiment, as it so happens. It seems to be bourne of that same Stanford Prison Experiment thinking which is willing to risk The Dice Man on people en route to gaining a deeper psychological understanding of human nature. I also wonder how different this novel would be if it hadn't been written in the early 70s. The two seem inextricably linked, The Dice Man not in a good way. Like I said — think bloated middle-aged guy at a party. You should try it some time, come for a ride with me. View all The Dice Man comments. Dec 02, Manny rated it liked it Shelves: well-i-think-its-funnytoo-sexy-for-maiden-aunts. The hero, pretty drunk, is cleaning up one evening after a party. He sees The Dice Man die lying under a playing card, and a thought comes into The Dice Man head: if it's a one, I'll rape Arlene. He picks up the card, and it is, indeed, a one! So he goes downstairs to his neighbor, and says he's going to rape her. As it happens, no rape is needed, since she'd anyway been thinking that he was rather hot, and what a shame he'd never tried anything. They begin an affair, which works out nicely. After a while, he starts making more and more decisions by throwing dice. Many of these decisions result in him having various kinds of sex that he wouldn't otherwise have The Dice Man. It's easy to say what's wrong with this book; Hannah does a The Dice Man job in her review, and I don't have much to add to that. But here's what I think is good about it. People are generally brought up to believe that they are in control of their lives. In particular, they are encouraged to assume that, when they have sex with someone, it's because they decided to do it, for good reasons that they thought about carefully. But if you're honest with yourself, you probably won't have much trouble thinking of at least a couple of occasions when you've had sex with someone, or made another important decision, for no very good reason The Dice Man all. What Luke Reinhart is doing here is foregrounding that. He's saying that, once you admit that these things sometimes just happen, you feel a sense of liberation. The Dice Man aren't completely in control, and external circumstances are sometimes more The Dice Man than your will and your judgment; you might as well accept it. I think some people interpret the book a bit too literally. Of course, if you take it at face value, and decide that you really should make all your decisions randomly, your life will rapidly collapse around you. I would say he's just telling you that, if you embrace the idea that your existence is a combination The Dice Man both planning and random chance, you could enjoy it more.