<P> In a 1976 interview, Dick said he planned to write a sequel novel to The Man in the High Castle: "And so there's no real ending on it . I like to regard it as an open ending . It will segue into a sequel sometime ." Dick said that he had "started several times to write a sequel", but progressed little, because he was too disturbed by his original research for The Man in the High Castle and could not mentally bear "to go back and read about Nazis again ." He suggested that the sequel would be a collaboration with another author: </P> <P> Somebody would have to come in and help me do a sequel to it . Someone who had the stomach for the stamina to think along those lines, to get into the head; if you're going to start writing about Reinhard Heydrich, for instance, you have to get into his face . Can you imagine getting into Reinhard Heydrich's face? </P> <P> Two chapters of the proposed sequel were published in The Shifting Realities of Philip K. Dick, a collection of his essays and other writings . </P> <P> Dick's novel Radio Free Albemuth is rumored to have started as a sequel to The Man in the High Castle . Dick described the plot of this early version of Radio Free Albemuth--then titled VALISystem A--writing: </P>

What does the end of the man in the high castle mean