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The Oxford Bookworms Library: Stage 5: 1,800 Headwords: Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? Book
Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? is a book that most people think they remember, and almost always get more or less wrong. Ridley Scott's film Blade Runner took a lot from it, and threw a lot away; wonderful in itself, it is a flash thriller where Dick's novel is a sober meditation. As we all know, bounty hunter Rick Deckard is stalking a group of androids returned from space with short life spans and murder on their minds--where Scott's Deckard was Harrison Ford, Dick's is a financially over-stretched municipal employee with bills to pay and a depressed wife. In a world where most animals have died, and pet-keeping is a social duty, he can only afford a robot imitation, unless he gets a big financial break. The genetically warped "chickenhead" John Isidore has visions of a tomb-world where entropy has finally won. And everyone plugs in to the spiritual agony of Mercer, whose sufferings for the sins of humanity are broadcast several times a day. Prefiguring the religious obsessions of Dick's last novels, this asks dark questions about identity and altruism. After all, is it right to kill the killers just because Mercer says so? --Roz KaveneyRead More
from£7.42 | RRP: * Excludes Voucher Code Discount Also available Used from £N/A
- 0194230635
- 9780194230636
- Philip K. Dick
- 1 June 2000
- OUP Oxford
- Paperback (Book)
- 122
- Abridged edition
- Abridged
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