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Book reviews: A Scanner Darkly, by Philip K. Dick

A Scanner Darkly, which became a movie starring Keanu Reaves, Robert Downey Jr. and Winona Ryder in 2006, is a science fiction novel written by the prolific and brilliant Philip K. Dick, author of Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?, among other science fiction classics. The book, originally published in 1977, tells the story of a dystopian 1994, Orange County California. The country is divided between dopers and "straights" - the straights, non-drug users, are regarded with a good deal of scorn by the dopers who use or deal drugs, and sometimes the law enforcement agents who are trying to track down the dopers.

The story follows Robert Arctor as he makes his way through his murky, troubled life, slowly becoming more addicted to Substance D, and Fred, who is also Robert Arctor undercover, slowly forgetting who he really is. Arctor lives in a house with two other men, both addicted to Substance D and other drugs and both falling apart in their own ways. Jim Barris is paranoid and brilliant in a disturbing way, and Arctor is convinced that Barris is attempting to kill both him and their housemate Luckman.

Arctor as Fred must watch hours and hours of surveillance tape of his own house, and he slowly becomes more detached from his own identity as the hemispheres of his brain are split apart - a common and irreversible side effect of Substance D addiction. Arctor is attempting to work his way up the supply chain of the dealers, but his addiction has become so crippling that he can no longer function. One of the most disquieting aspects of the writing is seeing Arctor's decay in the writing itself; psychologists describe the "cross-chatter" of a brain split by the use off too much Substance D, and as Arctor begins to experience it, so does the reader. Passages of the book appear in German, which Arctor does not speak, and he begins to experience a second personality not his own speaking inside his mind.

The plots and intrigues that wind around Arctor are only one aspect of this book; in addition to the sickening sense of doom that accompanies Arctor's delivery to a New Path facility, where he is little more than a burned out vegetable, Philip K. Dick has included a wealth of psychological, medical and technological information. The descriptions detailing the way the brain eventually falls apart under prolonged abuse of Substance D and the scramble suits used to so effectively disguise agents working to find the source of the drug give readers an enormous amount


Below are the top articles rated and ranked by Helium members on:

Book reviews: A Scanner Darkly, by Philip K. Dick

  • 1 of 4

    by Kenneth Andrews

    I've long been a fan of Philip K Dick's writing. It's just so wild and witty and full of fantastic imagery - it's easy to

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  • 2 of 4

    by Bailey Shoemaker Richards

    A Scanner Darkly, which became a movie starring Keanu Reaves, Robert Downey Jr. and Winona Ryder in 2006, is a science fiction

    read more

  • 3 of 4

    by Dave Simmons

    Philip K Dick's work is always a little disturbing and unusual, but A Scanner Darkly is definitely one of his oddest, and

    read more

  • 4 of 4

    by John Devera

    Philip K. Dick is possibly the most important writer of science fiction. That's a pretty grandiose statement considering

    read more

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