what happened to canada in the man in the high castle

1962 novel by Philip K. Dick

The Human being in the Loftier Castle
Man in the High Castle (1st Edition).png

Cover of first edition (hardcover)

Author Philip Thousand. Dick
Land United states
Linguistic communication English
Genre alternative history, science fiction, philosophical fiction
Publisher Putnam

Publication date

Oct 1962
Media type Print (hardcover & paperback)
Pages 240
OCLC 145507009

Dewey Decimal

813.54

The Man in the High Castle (1962), past Philip K. Dick, is an culling history novel wherein the Axis Powers won World State of war 2. The story occurs in 1962, fifteen years after the cease of the war in 1947, and depicts the political intrigues between Majestic Japan and Nazi Frg as they dominion the partitioned Usa. The Grasshopper Lies Heavy is a novel-within-the-novel which is an alternative history of the war in which the Allies defeat the Axis.

Dick'south thematic inspirations include the alternative history of the American Civil State of war, Bring the Jubilee (1953), by Ward Moore, and the I Ching, a Chinese book of divination that features in the story and the actions of the characters. The Man in the High Castle won the Hugo Award for All-time Novel in 1963, and was adapted to television as The Homo in the Loftier Castle in 2015.

Synopses [edit]

Groundwork [edit]

In The Man in the High Castle alternative history, Giuseppe Zangara assassinated President-elect Franklin D. Roosevelt, in 1933, resulting in the continuation of the Dandy Depression and the policy of United States non-interventionism at the kickoff of Earth War 2 in 1939. Therefore, American inaction immune Nazi Federal republic of germany to conquer and annex continental Europe and the Soviet Marriage into the Greater Germanic Reich. The exterminations of the Jews, the Romani people, the Slavs, homosexuals, and all other peoples whom the Nazis considered subhuman ensued. The Centrality powers then jointly conquered Africa. Purple Japan expanded its colonial empire with occupations of east asia and Oceania, and invaded the W Declension of the United states of america, while Nazi Germany invaded the Eastward Coast; the surrender of the Allies ended Globe War II in 1947.

By the 1960s, Majestic Japan and Nazi Frg are the world'southward superpowers, fighting a geopolitical cold state of war over the former United States. Japan extended the Greater Eastward Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere with the establishment of the Pacific States of America (PSA), with the politically neutral Rocky Mountain States acting every bit a buffer with the Nazi states to the east. Nazi North America is composed of two countries: (i) The South, which is ruled past a collaborationist pro–Nazi puppet authorities; and (ii) the north, which is the United states of america, ruled past a Nazi military governor. Moreover, Canada remains an contained country, despite having been one of the anti-Nazi Allies in the lost war.

The aged Hitler is incapacitated by tertiary syphilis, Martin Bormann is the acting Chancellor of Germany, and the inner-circle Nazis — Joseph Goebbels, Reinhard Heydrich, Hermann Göring, Arthur Seyss-Inquart — vie to succeed Hitler as the Führer of the Greater Germanic Reich. Technologically, the Nazis accept drained the Mediterranean Ocean for lebensraum and farmland, developed and used the hydrogen flop, developed rockets for travelling throughout the world and into outer space, such as the colonization missions to the Moon, and to the planets Venus and Mars.

Plot [edit]

The master setting of The Homo in the High Castle is the metropolis of San Francisco in the Pacific States of America, where Japanese judicial racism has enslaved blackness people and reduced the Chinese residents to 2d-class citizens; secondary settings are in the Rocky Mountain States. In 1962, fifteen years after Imperial Nihon and Nazi Federal republic of germany won World State of war Ii, in the Pacific States of America, the man of affairs Robert Childan owns an antiques shop that specializes in Americana for a Japanese clientele who fetishize cultural artifacts of the former U.s.. One day, Childan receives a request from Nobusuke Tagomi, a loftier-ranking merchandise official, who seeks a souvenir to impress a Swedish industrialist named Baynes. In fact, Childan tin can readily fulfil Tagomi's asking because the shop is well-stocked with counterfeit antiques made by the metal works Wyndam-Matson Corporation.

Recently fired from his chore at a Wyndam-Matson factory in San Francisco, Frank Frink (formerly Fink) is a secret Jew and war veteran who agrees to join a former co-worker to start a concern making and selling jewelry. Meanwhile, in the Rocky Mountain States, Frank's ex-wife, Juliana Frink, works as a judo instructress in Catechism City, Colorado, and, in her private life, has entered a sexual human relationship with Joe Cinnadella, an Italian truck driver and ex-soldier. Throughout the story, the characters make important decisions based upon their interpretations of prophetic letters from the I Ching, a Chinese book of divination. Some characters too secretly read The Grasshopper Lies Heavy, a novel of speculative fiction that presents an culling history of Earth War 2, wherein the Allies defeat the Centrality. The Nazis ban the novel in the United States, but the Japanese let its publication and sale in the Pacific States of America.

In The Man in the High Castle (1962) Imperial Nippon and Nazi Germany have partitioned the continental The states (the borders of the four parts are not as exactly described in the novel as in this illustration)

 Pacific States of America

 Rocky Mountain States

 U.s. of America

 The South

Threatening to expose the Wyndam-Matson Corporation'southward supplying counterfeit antiques to Childan, Frink blackmails Wyndam-Matson for money to finance his jewelry business. Tagomi and Baynes run across, but Baynes repeatedly delays conducting any real business considering he awaits a third political party from Japan. Suddenly, the Nazi news media inform the public of the death of the Chancellor of Nazi Federal republic of germany, Martin Bormann, after a short affliction. Childan takes some of Frink's "authentic metalwork" jewelry on consignment, to curry favor with a Japanese client, who, to Childan'south surprise, says that the jewelry possesses much Wu, spiritual awareness. Juliana and Joe travel past road to Denver, Colorado, simply en route Joe impulsively decides that they take a side trip to Cheyenne, Wyoming, to encounter Hawthorne Abendsen, the mysterious author of The Grasshopper Lies Heavy; supposedly, Abendsen lives in a guarded manor named the Loftier Castle. Suddenly, the Nazi news media inform the public that Joseph Goebbels is the new Chancellor of Nazi Germany.

After much delay, Baynes and Tagomi meet their Japanese contact, while the Sicherheitsdienst (SD), the Nazi security service, is close to arresting Baynes because he really is Rudolf Wegener, a Nazi defector. Baynes warns his contact, a Japanese general, of the existence of Performance Dandelion, a plan of Goebbels for a Nazi sneak attack upon the Japanese Habitation Islands, with the goal of definitively destroying the Empire of Japan. Frink is exposed as a crypto-Jew and arrested by the San Francisco police force. Elsewhere, two SD agents confront Baynes and Tagomi, who uses his antique American pistol to kill both agents. In Colorado, Joe abruptly changes his appearance and mannerisms earlier the side trip to the Loftier Castle in Wyoming; Juliana infers that Joe intends to assassinate Abendsen. Joe reveals himself to be a Swiss Nazi when he confirms his intention; Juliana mortally wounds Joe and goes to warn Abendsen.

Wegener flies dorsum to Deutschland and learns that Reinhard Heydrich (a member of the faction confronting Operation Dandelion) has launched a coup d'état against Goebbels, to install himself as Chancellor of Nazi Germany. Tagomi is emotionally shaken by having killed the SD agents and afterward goes to the antiques store to sell back the pistol to Childan; instead, sensing the spiritual energy from one of Frink'due south jewelry creations, Tagomi impulsively buys the jewelry. Tagomi and then undergoes an intense spiritual feel during which he momentarily perceives an alternative version of San Francisco, evidenced by the Embarcadero throughway, which Tagomi has never seen and by the fact that white people do non defer to Japanese people.

Tagomi later meets with the German language delegate in San Francisco and compels the Germans to costless Frink, whom Tagomi has never met, by refusing to sign the order of extradition to Nazi Germany. Juliana has a spiritual experience when she arrives in Cheyenne. She discovers that Abendsen lives with his family in a normal house, having abandoned the High Castle because of a changed outlook on life; thus the possibility of existence assassinated no longer worries him. After evading Juliana's questions nigh his literary inspiration, Abendsen says that he used the I Ching to guide his writing of The Grasshopper Lies Heavy. Before leaving, Juliana infers then that Truth wrote the novel to reveal the Inner Truth that Majestic Japan and Nazi Federal republic of germany did lose World War 2 in 1945.

The Grasshopper Lies Heavy [edit]

Several characters in The Man in the High Castle read the popular novel The Grasshopper Lies Heavy, by Hawthorne Abendsen, which championship the readers presume derives from The Bible verse fragment: "The grasshopper shall exist a brunt" (Ecclesiastes 12:5). As an alternative history of the Second World State of war, wherein the Allies defeat the Axis Powers, the Nazi government bans The Grasshopper Lies Heavy in the Due south, whereas the Pacific States of America practise allow the publication and sale of the Abensen's counterfactual novel.[i] : 91

The Grasshopper Lies Heavy postulates that President Roosevelt survives the 1933 assassination endeavour but choses non to seek re-election in 1940. The next president, Rexford Tugwell, moves the American Pacific Fleet from Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, saving it from attack by the Imperial Japanese Navy, which ensures that the land is meliorate equipped to fight the war.[1] : lxx Having retained most of their military-industrial capabilities, the Great britain contributes more to the Allied war effort, which facilitates the defeat of Field Marshal Erwin Rommel in the Northward African Entrada. The British fight the Axis armies through the Caucasus to join the Soviet Union and defeat the Nazis in the Battle of Stalingrad; the Kingdom of Italy and the Kingdom of Hungary each renege their membership in the Axis and betray the Nazis; the British Army joins the Red Ground forces in the Boxing of Berlin, the decisive defeat of Nazi Germany. At state of war's terminate in 1945, Hitler and the Nazi leaders are tried every bit war criminals and are put to death.[1] : 131

After the war, Tugwell promulgates the New Deal for the countries of the world, which finances a decade of rebuilding in Cathay and the education of illiterate peoples in the undeveloped countries of Africa and Asia, who receive television sets past which they are taught to read and write, are instructed in digging wells and in purifying water. The New Bargain financial aid facilitates American businesses building factories in the undeveloped countries of Asia and Africa. American society is peaceful and harmonious and is at peace with the other countries of the world; the war ends the Soviet Spousal relationship. Ten years after the war, still headed by Winston Churchill, the British Empire becomes militaristic, anti-American and establishes prison camps in India for Chinese subjects considered disloyal. Suspecting that the U.s.a. is sponsoring the anti-colonial subversion of British colonial dominion in Asia, Churchill provokes a cold war for global hegemony; the geopolitical rivalry leads to an Anglo–American war won past the Uk.[one] : 169–172

Inspirations [edit]

The novelist Philip K. Dick said that he imagined the story of The Man in the Loftier Castle (1962) from his reading of the novel Bring the Jubilee (1953), by Ward Moore, which is an alternative history of the U.Southward. civil war won past the Confederacy. In the acknowledgements folio of The Human in the High Castle, Dick mentions the thematic influences of the pop history The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich: A History of Nazi Germany (1960), by William L. Shirer; the biography Hitler: A Study in Tyranny (1952), by Alan Bullock; The Goebbels Diaries (1948); Foxes of the Desert (1960), by Paul Carrell; and the 1950 translation of the I Ching, by Richard Wilhelm.[ii] [1] As a novelist, P. K. Dick used the I Ching to craft the themes, plot and story of The Man in the Loftier Castle, whose characters as well utilise the I Ching to inform and guide their decisions.[ii]

Dick cites the thematic influences of Japanese and Tibetan poesy upon the narrative of The Man in the High Castle; (i) The haiku in page 48 of the novel is from the get-go volume of the Anthology of Japanese Literature (1955), edited by Donald Keene; (ii) the waka poem in page 135 is from Zen and Japanese Culture (1955), by D. T. Suzuki and (three) the Tibetan book of the dead, the Bardo Thodol (1960), edited past Walter Evans-Wentz and mentions the sociologic influences of the expressionist novella Miss Lonelyhearts (1933), by Nathanael Due west, in which an unhappy newspaper reporter pseudonymously writes the "Miss Lonelyhearts" advice column, through which he dispenses advice to emotionally forlorn readers during the Great Depression. Despite his job every bit Miss Lonelyhearts, the reporter seeks consolation in faith, sexual promiscuity, rural vacations and much work; no activeness provides him with a sense of personal authenticity derived from his intellectual and emotional appointment with the world.[one] : 118

Reception [edit]

Avram Davidson praised the novel as a "superior work of fiction", citing Dick's use of the I Ching every bit "fascinating". Davidson concluded that "It's all here—extrapolation, suspense, action, fine art, philosophy, plot, [and] graphic symbol".[3] The Man in the High Castle secured for Dick the 1963 Hugo Award for Best Novel.[4] [five] [6] In a review of a paperback reprint of the novel, Robert Silverberg wrote in Amazing Stories magazine, "Dick'southward prose crackles with excitement, his characters are vividly real, his plot is stunning".[7]

In The Organized religion of Science Fiction, Frederick A. Kreuziger explores the theory of history unsaid by Dick's cosmos of the two culling realities

Neither of the two worlds, however, the revised version of the event of WWII nor the fictional account of our present world, is anywhere near similar to the world we are familiar with. But they could be! This is what the book is about. The book argues that this world, described twice, although differently each fourth dimension, is exactly the world we know and are familiar with. Indeed, it is the merely world nosotros know: the world of chance, luck, fate.[eight]

A merchandise paperback edition of the novel was published in 1992 past Vintage Books.[9]

Adaptations [edit]

Audiobook [edit]

An unabridged The Homo in the High Castle audiobook, read by George Guidall and running approximately 9.5 hours over vii audio cassettes, was released in 1997.[10] Another unabridged audiobook version was released in 2008 past Blackstone Sound, read by Tom Wyner (credited every bit Tom Weiner) and running approximately 8.5 hours over seven CDs.[xi] [12] A 3rd unabridged audiobook recording was released in 2022 by Brilliance Audio, read by Jeff Cummings with a running time of 9 hours 58 minutes.[13]

Television [edit]

Subsequently a number of attempts to suit the book to the screen, in October 2014, Amazon's flick product unit of measurement began filming the pilot episode of The Man in the Loftier Castle in Roslyn, Washington, for release through the Amazon Prime Spider web video streaming service.[14] [15] The pilot episode was released by Amazon Studios on January 15, 2015,[16] [17] and was Amazon'southward "most watched pilot ever" according to Amazon Studios' vice president, Roy Price.[xviii] On Feb 18, 2015, Amazon greenish-lit the series.[nineteen] The show became bachelor for streaming on November twenty, 2015.[20]

Incomplete sequel [edit]

In a 1976 interview, Dick said he planned to write a sequel novel to The Man in the High Castle: "And and then there'southward no real ending on it. I like to regard it as an open catastrophe. It will segue into a sequel sometime."[21] Dick said that he had "started several times to write a sequel" but progressed little, because he was likewise disturbed by his original enquiry for The Man in the High Castle and could not mentally bear "to go back and read almost Nazis over again".[22] He suggested that the sequel would be a collaboration with another author:

Somebody would have to come in and help me do a sequel to information technology. Someone who had the stomach for the stamina to think forth those lines, to go into the head; if you're going to beginning writing almost Reinhard Heydrich, for instance, y'all have to become into his face up. Can you imagine getting into Reinhard Heydrich's confront?[22]

2 capacity of the proposed sequel were published in The Shifting Realities of Philip K. Dick, a collection of his essays and other writings.[23] Eventually, Dick admitted that the proposed sequel became an unrelated novel, The Ganymede Takeover, co-written with Ray Nelson (known for writing the brusk story filmed every bit They Alive).

Dick's novel Radio Free Albemuth is rumored to have started as a sequel to The Human in the Loftier Castle.[24] Dick described the plot of this early version of Radio Costless Albemuth—and so titled VALISystem A—writing:

... a divine and loving ETI [extraterrestrial intelligence] ... aid[s] Hawthorne Abendsen, the protagonist-author in [The Homo in the High Castle], continue on in his difficult life after the Nazi cloak-and-dagger police finally got to him ... VALISystem A, located in deep space, sees to it that nothing can prevent Abendsen from finishing his novel.[24]

The novel eventually became a new story unrelated to The Man in the High Castle.[24] Dick ultimately abased the Albemuth volume, unpublished during his lifetime, though portions were salvaged and used for 1981's VALIS.[24] Radio Free Albemuth was published in 1985, iii years after Dick'southward expiry.[25]

See besides [edit]

  • Fatherland (novel)
  • Hypothetical Centrality victory in World War 2
  • Fake reality in fiction

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f Dick, Philip Thou. (2011). The Man in the High Castle (1st Mariner Books ed.). Boston: Mariner Books. pp. ix–ten. ISBN978-0-547-60120-five . Retrieved December 10, 2015.
  2. ^ a b Cover, Arthur Byron (February 1974). "Interview with Philip K. Dick". Vertex. 1 (6). Retrieved July 23, 2014.
  3. ^ Davidson, Avram (June 1963). "Books". The Magazine of Fantasy & Scientific discipline Fiction: 61.
  4. ^ "Philip M. Dick, Won Awards For Science-Fiction Works". The New York Times. March 3, 1982. Retrieved March 30, 2010.
  5. ^ "1963 Award Winners & Nominees". Worlds Without End . Retrieved September 27, 2009.
  6. ^ Wyatt, Fred (November seven, 1963). "A Brisk Bathrobe Canter At Cry Of 'Fire!' Stirs Claret". I-J Reporter'due south Notebook. Daily Independent Periodical. San Rafael, California. Retrieved Oct 25, 2015 – via Newspapers.com. Belatedly I learned that Philip K. Dick of Point Reyes Station won the Hugo, the 21st Earth Science Fiction Convention Almanac Achievement Award for the best novel of 1962.
  7. ^ Silverberg, Robert (June 1964). "The Spectroscope". Amazing Stories. 38 (6): 124. Retrieved Jan thirty, 2021.
  8. ^ Kreuziger, Frederick A. (1986). In The Organized religion of Scientific discipline Fiction . Popular Press. p. 82. ISBN9780879723675 . Retrieved July 27, 2016. human in the high castle cynical.
  9. ^ Staff (July 26, 1992). "New in Paperback". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on January ii, 2016. Retrieved October 25, 2015 – via HighBeam Research.
  10. ^ Willis, Jesse (May 29, 2003). "Review of The Homo In The High Castle past Philip 1000. Dick". SFFaudio. Retrieved Dec 10, 2015.
  11. ^ "The Man in the High Castle". BlackstoneAudio.com. Archived from the original on August 9, 2010. Retrieved Jan 10, 2016.
  12. ^ L.B. "Audiobook review: The Man in the High Castle by Philip K. Dick, read by Tom Weiner". audiofilemagazine.com. Retrieved January 10, 2016.
  13. ^ The Man in the High Castle. Audible, Inc.
  14. ^ Muir, Pat (October 5, 2014). "Roslyn hopes new TV prove brings 15 more minutes of fame". Yakima Herald . Retrieved March 28, 2017.
  15. ^ Andreeva, Nellie (July 24, 2014). "Amazon Studios Adds Drama 'The Man In The High Castle', Comedy 'Merely Add together Magic' To Pilot Slate". Deadline . Retrieved January x, 2016.
  16. ^ "The Man in the High Castle: Season 1, Episode 1". Retrieved January 17, 2015.
  17. ^ "The Homo in the Loftier Castle". Internet Movie Database. Retrieved January 18, 2015.
  18. ^ Lewis, Hilary (Feb xviii, 2015). "Amazon Orders v New Serial Including 'Man in the High Castle'". The Hollywood Reporter . Retrieved Dec 10, 2015.
  19. ^ Robertson, Adi (Feb 18, 2015). "Amazon green-lights The Man in the High Castle Tv series". The Verge . Retrieved December 10, 2015.
  20. ^ Moylan, Brian (November eighteen, 2015). "Does The Man in the High Castle bear witness that the best TV is now streamed?". The Guardian . Retrieved December 10, 2015.
  21. ^ "Hr 25: A Talk With Philip Grand. Dick « Philip K. Dick Fan Site". Philipkdickfans.com. June 26, 1976. Retrieved Dec 10, 2015.
  22. ^ a b RC, Lord (2006). Pink Axle: A Philip M. Dick Companion (1st ed.). Ward, Colorado: Ganymedean Slime Mold Pubs. p. 106. ISBN9781430324379 . Retrieved December 10, 2015. [ self-published source ]
  23. ^ Dick, Philip K. (1995). "Part 3. Works Related to 'The Human in the High Castle' and its Proposed Sequel". In Sutin, Lawrence (ed.). The Shifting Realities of Philip K. Dick: Selected Literary and Philosophical Writings. New York: Vintage. ISBN0-679-74787-vii.
  24. ^ a b c d Pfarrer, Tony. "A Possible Man in the High Castle Sequel?". Willis E. Howard, 3 Home Page. Archived from the original on August xix, 2008. Retrieved July 22, 2015.
  25. ^ LC Online Itemize — Item Information (Full Record). Catalog.loc.gov. 1985. ISBN9780877957621 . Retrieved Dec 10, 2015.

Further reading [edit]

  • Brown, William Lansing. 2006. "alternative Histories: Ability, Politics, and Paranoia in Philip Roth'south The Plot confronting America and Philip K. Dick'south The Homo in the High Castle", The Image of Power in Literature, Media, and Society: Selected Papers, 2006 Conference, Guild for the Interdisciplinary Study of Social Imagery. Wright, Will; Kaplan, Steven (eds.); Pueblo, CO: Society for the Interdisciplinary Study of Social Imagery, Colorado State University-Pueblo; pp. 107–11.
  • Campbell, Laura E. 1992. "Dickian Fourth dimension in The Human in the High Castle", Extrapolation, 33: iii, pp. 190–201.
  • Carter, Cassie, 1995. "The Metacolonization of Dick'southward The Human in the High Castle: Mimicry, Parasitism and Americanism in the PSA", Science Fiction Studies #67, 22:iii, pp. 333–342.
  • DiTommaso, Lorenzo, 1999. "Redemption in Philip G. Dick's The Human being in the Loftier Castle", Science Fiction Studies # 77, 26:, pp. 91–119, DePauw Academy.
  • Fofi, Goffredo 1997. "Postfazione", Philip 1000. Dick, La Svastica sul Sole, Roma, Fanucci, pp. 391–5.
  • Hayles, N. Katherine 1983. "Metaphysics and Metafiction in The Man in the High Castle", Philip One thousand. Dick. Greenberg, Yard.H.; Olander, J.D. (eds.); New York: Taplinger, 1983, pp. 53–71.
  • Malmgren, Carl D. 1980. "Philip Dick's The Human being in the High Castle and the Nature of Scientific discipline Fictional Worlds", Bridges to Science Fiction. Slusser, George E.; Guffey, George R.; Rose, Marking (eds.); Carbondale and Edwardsville: Southern Illinois University Press, pp. 120–thirty.
  • Mountfort, Paul 2016. "The I Ching and Philip K. Dick's The Man in the High Castle", Scientific discipline-Fiction Studies # 129, 43:, pp. 287–309.
  • Pagetti, Carlo, 2001a. "La svastica americana" [Introduction], Philip Thousand. Dick, L'uomo nell'alto castello, Roma: Fanucci, pp. 7–26.
  • Proietti, Salvatore, 1989. "The Human being in The High Castle: politica e metaromanzo", Il sogno dei simulacri. Pagetti, Carlo; Viviani, Gianfranco (eds.); Milano: Nord, 1989 pp. 34–41.
  • Rieder, John 1988. "The Metafictive World of The Man in the High Castle: Hermeneutics, Ethics, and Political Ideology", Science-Fiction Studies # 45, 15.2: 214-25.
  • Rossi, Umberto, 2000. "All Around the High Castle: Narrative Voices and Fictional Visions in Philip K. Dick's The Man in the High Castle", Telling the Stories of America — History, Literature and the Arts — Proceedings of the 14th AISNA Biennial conference (Pescara, 1997), Clericuzio, A.; Goldoni, Annalisa; Mariani, Andrea (eds.); Roma: Nuova Arnica, pp. 474–83.
  • Simons, John L. 1985. "The Power of Small Things in Philip K. Dick's The Man in the High Castle". The Rocky Mountain Review of Language and Literature, 39:four, pp. 261–75.
  • Warrick, Patricia, 1992. "The See of Taoism and Fascism in The Man in the High Castle", On Philip One thousand. Dick, Mullen et al. (eds.); Terre Haute and Greencastle: SF-TH Inc. 1992, pp. 27–52.

External links [edit]

  • The Human in the High Castle cover art gallery
  • The Man in the Loftier Castle at the Net Book List
  • The Man in the High Castle at Worlds Without End

morgancontery.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Man_in_the_High_Castle

0 Response to "what happened to canada in the man in the high castle"

Post a Comment

Iklan Atas Artikel

Iklan Tengah Artikel 1

Iklan Tengah Artikel 2

Iklan Bawah Artikel