A Scanner Darkly

A Scanner Darkly

4.04 of 5 stars 4.04  ·  rating details  ·  28,958 ratings  ·  1,035 reviews
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 o...more

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Kemper
I used to wonder how Phillip K. Dick came up with all the trippy concepts in his stories until I read A Scanner Darkly. That’s when I realized that the drugs probably had a lot to do with it.

Originally published in 1977 and set in the mid ‘90s, the book tells the story of Bob Arctor. Arctor appears to be just another burned out druggie who lives with a couple of other dopers, and they spend most of their time getting high on Substance D and assorted other drugs. Bob is actually an undercover nar...more
Carol
Jan 13, 2013 Carol rated it 3 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: drug users, acid-fantasy
I've started and restarted this review a number of times. With that in mind, I'm going to take a page from mark monday (http://www.goodreads.com/user/show/13...) and share a multi-perspective review.


The .gif summation:

descriptiondescriptiondescription


Recipe for A Scanner Darkly:

1. Take moderate amounts of the drug of your choice (recommend one with highly hallucinogenic and paranoiac qualities)
2. Allow to simmer while reading Less Than Zero
3. Stir in a random amount of a second drug (preferably one with potential for permanent...more
Aerin
This is simultaneously one of the funniest and one of the most depressing books I have ever read. Dick is a master of that technique, though: taking something awful and finding the humor and humanity in it, without taking away any of the horror.

It's a story about the drug trade in the near future, and a man named Bob Arctor, who is both drug addict and narc. He's addicted to a deadly drug called Substance D, which causes splitting of the personality. As time goes on, his two personalities become...more
notgettingenough

Continued on from: http://www.goodreads.com/review/show/...

Update: I wasn't able to fit all I wanted to say on The Man in the High Castle in the allotted space, so I thought, since it is generalised Dick stuff (which I say advisedly) I could put the rest here:

The Superior Person is inexhaustible in his willingness to teach


Mike: LeGuin?

Phil: Well, as Jesus said to Pontius Pilate, you said it, not me, Gesagts in Luther's translation, Beis du der juder Konig. And then Jesus answers, Sie sagts, you
...more
Dan
Aug 15, 2007 Dan rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Druggies, Friends of Druggies, PKD fans, cyberpunk fans
In this novel there are two types of people, those who are addicted to substance D, and those who haven't tried it yet. Substance D is the ultimate high, and highly addictive. This book is the story of Fred, the narcotics agent, and Bob Arctor, the substance D dealer, who he is investigating. Of course, Fred and Bob Arctor are one person who is having his personality split apart by copious abuse of substance D.

This book is simultaneously hilarious and heart breaking and it is a really excellent...more
Eddie Watkins
I watched the Richard Linklater film version of this again over the weekend, and besides confirming that it's my favorite Dick adaptation it also reminded me how much I love the book. Besides being a perfect exemplification of out-there paranoia (the circular structure really turns the screw on this), like almost every book of his it's also firmly and tangibly rooted in the things and relationships of mundane daily life. This book gives me a paranoia contact high.
Rupert
One of Dick's top masterpieces! Incredible journey into splintering minds and drug altered states. Even scared me away from coffee for a day or two. And despite how okay the recent movie version was, I still wish I hadn't seen it and got my memories of the book murky......and all these rivers of Hollywood cash running over the grave of a brilliant writer who died almost dirt poor...........
Lead
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Scott
I found this book to be fascinating in its account of a subculture of drug addicts from within. In the author's afterward Dick states that he wrote from an amoral position about drug use, highlighting the often asymmetrical balance between the decision to abuse drugs and the dehumanizing consequences of that decision. This story is understandable, actually, as a social critique from an ethical/moral stance that believes that punishment should match the transgression. More interesting to me, howe...more
Will
I like P.K. Dick, but this just plain sucked.

No narrative tension, the writing is awful (I would quote some of it as proof, but I already got rid of my copy), and the most potentially exciting elements of the book (drug subculture and its lingo and take on friendship, multiple identities) are handled with the zest and elegance of a cut-rate rectal exam. Does that analogy even make sense? I don't think so, but neither did this book.

I've heard this was the first book he wrote after he kicked drug...more
Lorraine
Absolutely brilliant, and absolutely terrifying. The scary implication is that the condition of the modern man is Arctor's condition -- we are all like that, caught up in it and not being able to see the truth (whatever THAT is, because that has lost its meaning). The other scary implication of this is that at the end of it all, we're all pawns in a larger, political game and we have absolutely no control, even if we think we do.

At the same time, we are not like that -- it is the paradox that sp...more
Misarweth
Oct 23, 2008 Misarweth rated it 4 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to Misarweth by: Samael
Livre à ne pas lire dans le noir d'une nuit presque silencieuse alors que personne ne peut vous rappeler que les êtres humains faits de chaleur et doués de sentiment existent.
Très bon livre, vraiment.
Très flippant aussi.
Pas dans le sens "horreur" mais plutôt dans le sens où on finit par s'embrouiller soi même entre le moi, le surmoi, le non moi, le moi flippé.
Séquence fiction comme il dit. C'est tellement plausible.

Et puis tout à coup on prend conscience de l'horreur de la situation. Et en même...more
Al

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

...more
Mike
I forgot to write a review of this right away, so it's a bit hard to reconstruct my thoughts and opinions now. I must say it wasn't my favourite book, at least in part because it wasn't at all what I was expecting. It was depressing at times (watching people spiral into brain addled drug addiction). And it was unbelievably pointless at times (as the book recounts in great detail the conversations and thoughts of the characters, who are almost always high). What redeemed the book, actually, was t...more
Nick
Significant spoilers ahead.

Def the heaviest Phillip K. Dick story I've ever read. Made more so by its semi-autobiographical nature. I'm glad to have gotten a small insight into what made the author's mind so strange though. Illustrates the sadness and abandonment of anything worldly which is entailed by serious drug addiction. This is a side of the drug community/drug phenomenon which is difficult to acknowledge because there really seems to be no solution.

The main character undergoes personalit...more
Freddy
The narrative had a lot of potential. I was hooked (no pun intended) on Bob Arctor/Fred/Bruce's character and story arc, and really hoped it would conclude on a high note, but it didn't; it turned very dark, very fast, leaving a myriad of questions unanswered.

And that's exactly what happens to Bob/Fred/Bruce. I feel the author might have done this on purpose, his note at the end gives some indication of that. I'm giving it three stars, not because I think it's a good or original story, but simpl...more
Electriczen
I became addicted to Science Fiction when I was young after reading The Lensman Series by e.e. "doc" smith, probably the greatest science fiction series ever written. Over the years I read all of the 'greats' of that genre" Isaac Asimov, Ray Bradbury, Robert Heinlein, Frank Herbert, Walter Miller, Larry Niven, Harlen Ellison, and Arthur C. Clarke.

For those of us that grew up with Science Fiction these are hard times. Not much hard science fiction is being written these days. Charles Sheffield, J...more
Sarah
Philip K. Dick's A Scanner Darkly tells the story of a hypothetical drug called Substance D and the problems it generates in society as it is widely abused. By the end of the novel, the main character, Bob Arctor/Fred/Bruce, has been a drug addict, an undercover narcotics officer, and a drug rehabilitation patient. Through his increasingly unreliable eyes, the reader eventually realizes the awful extent to which Substance D has pervaded society and become a seemingly unstoppable threat to humani...more
Mircalla64 (free Liu Xiaobo)

Los Angeles 1994. Una droga nuova e pericolosa, la sostanza M, invade il mercato seminando morte e follia. Bob Arctor, un agente della narcotici, si infiltra tra i tossici per arrivare agli spacciatori e poi ai capi. Ma nel frattempo inizia a provare la sostanza M, e il suo concetto di realtà ne risulta un tantino distorto, Bob gira silenzioso tra i consumatori di sostanza M (come morte) e li spia. Va alla sede della narcotici con la sua bella tuta disindividuante, e là fa rapporto sul suo opera...more
Richard
Rarely a book will come along which I feel gives me a new insight into a people, a place, a way of life, or a way of thinking and A Scanner Darkly is one of these books. P. K. Dick expertly weaves a story about drug culture and in particularly the destruction of the mind caused by drugs. As he states in the afterward, the novel is neither pro-drug nor is is anti-drug. Instead it simply describes what it is like to live among a group of peers who are slowly killing themselves with drugs. Given th...more
Donovan
This is a fascinating but hard read. It is one of those books where you will find yourself going back paragraphs, pages and even chapters to make sure you are following things correctly. I wonder if the way it was written was Philip K. Dick's homage to his own drug use?...It wouldn't surprise me. While quite serious in its delivery, there is a definite undercurrent of black comedy that flows with the story. There is a self-depreciating element for the drug users under investigation and for the p...more
Marco Manicardi
Questo era uno di quei libri di PKD che mi tenevo buoni per la vecchiaia - avendo già letto quasi tutto, di PKD, in giovine età - solo che l'ho trovato in offerta su bookrepublic, e non ho potuto fare a meno di comprarlo, prima, e di leggerlo, adesso. E ho fatto bene. Ho fatto bene a tenermelo per la vecchiaia - ché rispetto a quando ho letto quasi tutta l'opera dickiana, be', vecchio son vecchio - e ho fatto bene a leggerlo.

Tempo fa avevo anche visto il film, perché sono un imbelle e non ho res...more
Ryan
This was my first exposure to Philip K. Dick, and he definitely lives up to his reputation as an author of dystopian visions, conspiracy theories, and mind-bending philosophical ideas. But he also turns out to be an articulate, witty writer with a lot of apparent first-hand knowledge of the drug culture he focuses on. Once you get past the dated 1970s slang, A Scanner Darkly is a pretty intense and darkly comic reading experience, capturing the madness and paranoia of drug addiction, and the suf...more
Greg
A Scanner Darkly, Phillip K Dick, 1977, 9/10. Narcotics agent Fred has a drug dealer alter ego, Bob Arctor, whom he is assigned to investigate as a dealer of substance D (death). That's right, Fred is assigned to investigate himself.

Fred becomes increasingly detached, due to a burnout of his corpus callosum (the primary nerve bridge between the right and left brain), splitting his personality in two.

Agents wear a special suit when they meet with their superiors. The suit blurs your image, in ord...more
Lee
This is a great book. It is powerful, and emotionally draining however, so you have been warned. Most of the characters are based on real people in the author's life during his psychedelic and speed binges in Marin County and Vancouver during the late sixties early seventies. For instance, Bob Arctor's buddy who has used Substance-D. The poor character convinces himself that his body is crawling with insects, that his body is infested. This is a real friend of Dick's whose "mind was blown" and w...more
Kelli
I am embarassed to say that I only recently discovered Philip K. Dick as an author even though I've seen the majority of films based on his books (Blade Runner, Total Recall, Minority Report, The Adjustment Bureau, A Scanner Darkly). I enjoyed "A Scanner Darkly" as a film before I read the book but in the interest of full disclosure, I did not truly understand it. After reading the book, however, I can appreciate it for its progressive ideas and accurate representation of drug-addled minds.

With...more
Jason
My first novel by PKD and it certainly won't be my last. From the very first sentence I just knew that I would love this novel. Dick's writing is mesmerizing in its imagination, wit and thought-provoking ideas concerning social/cultural/religious ideologies of this dystopian society (or perhaps one that is all too familiar); full of humor and pathos. He is a master story-teller and possesses such a unique voice that entranced me. The man really has a great ear for dialogue. There were several pa...more
Weathervane
A Scanner Darkly is a terrible book. Not the story, mind you, but what it portrays: humanity's capacity for willful degeneration, mindless hedonism that scorns the integrity of body and mind. The message is not "drugs are bad, m'kay," but "why?" Why would anyone do this to themselves? Is there anything to be done to help them? At what point do they become forever lost, soulless automatons empty of any joy or beauty or humanity; and what is humanity anyway, for that matter? The story breaks down...more
Tancredi
"Ho visto" disse Bruce. Pensò: ho compreso. Che cos'era. Io ho visto crescere la Sostanza M. Io ho visto sorgere la morte dalla terra, dal suolo stesso, in un unico campo azzurro, dalla sembianza di stoppia.

Non ci sono mezzi termini per parlare di questo romanzo. E' un capolavoro assoluto.
A lungo considerato uno dei migliori romanzi di fantascienza, in seguito ad un processo di rivalutazione dell'autore, "Un oscuro scrutare" è considerato uno dei migliori capolavori della letteratura contemporan

...more
Michaelbert Humperdink
This was one of those books I always meant to read in college but never had the time, my time monopolized by statistical physics and classical philosophy. Unknowingly dwelling in a pumkinshell beacon of liberality and "reefer madness" surrounded by a loathsome sea of uber-conservative republican retards, I had no idea: about PKD or Florida. In twilit hindsight, I believe I see a kindred spirit in a man whose middle name was "Kindred." Florida, however....the less said about its pervasive necultu...more
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A Scanner Darkly (Paperback)
A Scanner Darkly (Paperback)
A Scanner Darkly (Paperback)
A Scanner Darkly (Paperback)
A Scanner Darkly (Paperback)

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Philip K. Dick was born in Chicago in 1928 and lived most of his life in California. He briefly attended the University of California, but dropped out before completing any classes. In 1952, he began writing professionally and proceeded to write numerous novels and short-story collections. He won the Hugo Award for the best novel in 1962 for The Man in the High Castle and the John W. Campbell Memo...more
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