A Scanner Darkly (Paperback)

Author: Philip K. Dick
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Product Summary
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 9781400096909
Publisher: Vintage Books USA
Publish Date: 5/23/2006
Buy.com Sku: 202490820
Item#: RCDJ7Q
Dimensions (in Inches) 8H x 5.75L x 0.5T
Pages: 288
 
Bob Arctor is a dealer of the lethally addictive drug Substance D. Fred is the police agent assigned to tail and eventually bust him. To do so, Fred takes on the identity of a drug dealer named Bob Arctor. And since Substance D--which Arctor takes in massive doses--gradually splits the user's brain into two distinct, combative entities, Fred doesn't realize he is narcing on himself.
Caustically funny, eerily accurate in its depiction of junkies, scam artists, and the walking brain-dead, Philip K. Dick's industrial-grade stress test of identity is as unnerving as it is enthralling.
 
Annotation:
A masterpiece of psychedelic sci-fi paranoia, Philip K. Dick's A SCANNER DARKLY was published in 1977 and set in the then-future world of Orange County circa 1994. Playing insidiously with Dick's obsessions with identity and madness, the novel's antihero is a drug dealer named Bob Arctor, who has become so addled by his addiction to the psychotropic drug Substance D (aka The Slow Death), that his brain divides into separate identities, and he fails to realize that he is actually an undercover narcotics agent named Agent Fred. Since Agent Fred utilizes an identity scrambling outfit, Arctor's junkie friends also cannot recognize that the two people are one and the same. Eventually, Agent Fred is pulled out of the situation by another undercover agent, and must spend time in a rehabilitation center, where he discovers the secret origin of Substance D. The novel was semi-autobiographical, reflecting Dick's addiction to methamphetamines and his strange rehab experiences at the cult-like Synanon program. The novel was made into an animated film by Richard Linklater in 2006, using voice-acting by Keanu Reeves, Robert Downey Jr., Woody Harrelson, and Winona Ryder.

 

Author Bio
Philip K. Dick
Generally regarded as one of the most important American science fiction writers, Philip Kindred Dick was one of a pair of twins born on December 16, 1928; both suffered from a series of physical and mental problems, which would kill Dick's sister, Jane Kindred, 41 days later, and would continue to plague him for the rest of his life. Exacerbated by a voluminous intake of amphetamines, his health continued to worsen as he produced an enormous body of work--nearly 50 novels and 115 short stories in the 29 years following his first published story at the age of 24 to his death from a stroke at the age of 53. Characterized by feelings of paranoia and underlying pessimism, his work includes the 1963 Hugo Award-winning THE MAN IN THE HIGH CASTLE--an alternate history account of the post-World War II United States--THE CONFESSIONS OF A CRAP ARTIST, loosely based on the breakup of his second marriage, and DO ANDROIDS DREAM OF ELECTRIC SHEEP?, which became the basis for the movie BLADE RUNNER. In 1974 he experienced what he referred to as a "mystical experience," which he spent the last nine years of his life exploring in an unfinished book called EXEGESIS. By the time he died, it had swollen to 8,000 pages. Though he is best known outside the science fiction community as having written the sources for the movies BLADE RUNNER and TOTAL RECALL, his work was instrumental in bringing about a radical shift in American science fiction, moving it away from the stereotypical space adventure, infusing it with explicit political content, and introducing psychological depth to the characters.

 
 
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Once a guy stood all day shaking bugs from his hair. The doctor told him there were no bugs in his hair. After he had taken a shower for eight hours, standing under hot water hour after hour suffering the pain of the bugs, he got out and dried himself, and he still had bugs in his hair; in fact, he had bugs all over him. A month later he had bugs in his lungs.

Having nothing else to do or think about, he began to work out theoretically the life cycle of the bugs, and, with the aid of the Britannica, try to determine specifically which bugs they were. They now filled his house. He read about many different kinds and finally noticed bugs outdoors, so he concluded they were aphids. After that decision came to his mind it never changed, no matter what other people told him ... like "Aphids don't bite people."

They said that to him because the endless biting of the bugs kept him in torment. At the 7-11 grocery store, part of a chain spread out over most of California
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