Excerpts from Masterpieces

Dissections and Specimens from literature

Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? Part 2

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The open­ing pages of Do Androids Dream of Elec­tric Sheep? by Phillip K. Dick are in the pre­vi­ous post. Here’s another mem­o­rable excerpt:

My hus­band,” Mrs. Klug­man began, but at that point, hav­ing fin­ished shav­ing, Isidore strode into the liv­ing room and shut off the TV set.

Silence. It flashed from the wood­work and the walls; it smote him with an awful, total power, as if gen­er­ated by a vast mill. It rose from the floor, up out of the tat­tered gray wall-to-wall car­pet­ing. It unleashed itself from the bro­ken and semi-broken appli­ances in the kitchen, the dead machines which hadn’t worked in all the time Isidore had lived here. From the use­less pole lamp in the liv­ing room it oozed out, mesh­ing with the empty and word­less descent of itself from the fly-specked ceil­ing. It man­aged in fact to emerge from every object within his range of vision, as if it–the silence–meant to sup­plant all things tan­gi­ble. Hence it assailed not only his ears but his eyes; as he stood by the inert TV set he expe­ri­enced the silence as vis­i­ble and, in its own way, alive. Alive! He had often felt its aus­tere approach before; when it came it burst in with­out sub­tlety, evi­dently unable to wait. The silence of the world could not rein back its greed. Not any longer. Not when it had vir­tu­ally won.

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He won­dered, then, if the oth­ers who had remained on Earth expe­ri­enced the void this way. Or was it pecu­liar to his pecu­liar bio­log­i­cal iden­tity, a freak gen­er­ated by his inept sen­sory appa­ra­tus? Inter­est­ing ques­tion, Isidore thought. But whom could he com­pare notes with? He lived alone in this dete­ri­o­rat­ing, blind build­ing of a thou­sand unin­hab­ited apart­ments, which like all its coun­ter­parts, fell, day by day, into greater entropic ruin. Even­tu­ally every­thing within the build­ing would merge, would be face­less and iden­ti­cal, mere pudding-like kip­ple piled to the ceil­ing of each apart­ment. And, after that, the uncared-for build­ing itself would set­tle into shape­less­ness, buried under the ubiq­uity of the dust. By then, nat­u­rally, he him­self would be dead, another inter­est­ing event to antic­i­pate as he stood here in his stricketn liv­ing room alone with the lun­g­less, all-penetrating, mas­ter­ful world-silence.

Bet­ter, per­haps, to turn the TV back on.

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pgs. 18–19

Noth­ing Depressed him more than the moments in which he con­trasted his cur­rent men­tal pow­ers with what he had for­merly pos­sessed. Every day he declined in sagac­ity and vigor.

p. 63

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