Note: This review may discuss more than you want to know. It won't spoil the movie but it might point out just how different the book is than the movie. Both are great, by the way!Philip K. Dick’s Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? isn’t just a sci-fi novel—it’s a haunting, philosophical journey into the nature of humanity, empathy, and identity. While best known as the inspiration for Blade Runner, the book stands on its own as a brilliant and thought-provoking work.Set in a post-apocalyptic future ravaged by nuclear war, the story follows Rick Deckard, a bounty hunter tasked with "retiring" rogue androids who are nearly indistinguishable from humans. But as Deckard navigates a bleak world of artificial animals, crumbling morality, and the eerie allure of the Nexus-6 androids, the lines between human and machine blur. What does it truly mean to be alive? To feel? To have a soul?Dick’s writing is deceptively simple but layered with deep existential questions. The novel explores the value of empathy—best embodied by the mysterious Mercerism religion—contrasting it against the cold rationality of androids who can mimic human emotion but seemingly lack true compassion. Yet, as the story unfolds, even that distinction becomes uncertain.Unlike the sleek cyberpunk noir of Blade Runner, Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? presents a crumbling, dust-choked world where owning a real animal is a status symbol, and artificial life—both robotic and human—is a necessity of survival. The novel is packed with eerie, almost dreamlike moments, from Deckard’s interactions with the seductive and unsettling Rachael Rosen to the tragic arc of J.R. Isidore, a lonely man who finds unexpected kinship with androids.At its core, this is a novel about what makes us human—not just biologically, but morally and emotionally. Dick never gives easy answers, and that’s what makes the book endure. It’s a must-read for fans of science fiction, philosophy, and dystopian literature, offering a mind-bending experience that lingers long after the final page.