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    <![CDATA[A Scanner Darkly]]>
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    <![CDATA[Mind- and reality-bending drugs factor again and again in Philip K. Dick's hugely influential SF stories. <em>A Scanner Darkly</em> cuts closest to the bone, drawing on Dick's own experience with illicit chemicals and on his many friends who died from drug abuse. Nevertheless, it's blackly farcical, full of comic-surreal conversations between people whose synapses are partly fried, sudden flights of paranoid logic, and bad trips like the one whose victim spends a subjective eternity having all his sins read to him, in shifts, by compound-eyed aliens. (It takes 11,000 years of this to reach the time when as a boy he discovered masturbation.) The antihero Bob Arctor is forced by his double life into warring double personalities: as futuristic narcotics agent &quot;Fred,&quot; face blurred by a high-tech scrambler, he must spy on and entrap suspected drug dealer Bob Arctor. His disintegration under the influence of the insidious Substance D is genuine tragicomedy. For Arctor there's no way off the addict's downward escalator, but what awaits at the bottom is a kind of redemption--there are more wheels within wheels than we suspected, and his life is not entirely wasted. <em>--David Langford, Amazon.co.uk</em>]]>
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        <name><![CDATA[Philip K. Dick]]></name>
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  <date_added>Wed Nov 26 12:02:59 -0800 2008</date_added>
  <date_updated>Wed Nov 26 12:03:17 -0800 2008</date_updated>
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