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Philip K. Dick: Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? (Paperback, 2017, Del Rey)

It was January 2021, and Rick Deckard had a license to kill. Somewhere among the …

A little mixed on this one.

First off, I have never seen Blade Runner, so that movie had no impact on my feelings for this book.

I was sucked into this book from the very start. Animals are basically extinct and farmers are usually having to resort to buying robotic versions of the animals to be able to still produce goods. People are using computers to program them to feel specific ways (you can even make yourself feel depressed for whatever reason). The world building was really well done and for the first half of the book I was very into it all.

Then it just kind of lost me. It starts to show its age when it comes to discussing or referencing any of the female characters. We are told all about their breasts and there's even the old school jolly of having sex with a robot.

I know that issues like …

@KnitAFett@books.theunseen.city it's not just a little bit old though is it, it's nearly as old as me! (over 50 years) I love PKD as a writer but he's awfully sexist, this is one of his milder stories. This is also the rare thing where the movie was better than the book (imo) though so different it's almost unrecognisable