I adore most of Philip K. Dick's works, including many of his non-science fiction novels, but Dr. Futurity is not one of his better works. In my opinion it is a subpar time travel narrative with some troubling sentiments about race. Nevertheless Dick does begin the novel strong, with a very interesting premise, as the main character, a medical doctor, is mysteriously teleported into a futuristic society. This society is fixated on death, where the prospect of saving a dying life is considered taboo. This presents an interesting dilemma for the protagonist, whose profession prioritizes prolonging life, when he comes to this realization. "Which was more realistic? This integration of death into the society, or the neurotic refusal of his own society to consider death at all?" (48). Philip K Dick is his best when exploring these type of premises, but unfortunately the story moves past this to focus on the time travel plot.
The latter half of this short novel gets bogged down in a convoluted time travel plot with questionable racial motivations. Granted, this was published in 1960, so it is notions on race are more based on contemporary thought than on any malice. The concept of race is what motivates the actions of several characters in this future world (such as protecting their race or destroying another), which doesn't make much sense when everyone in this future world is racially mixed. Dick treats the concept of race as a universal one, instead a socially contingent concept. But how would the concept of "whiteness" really exist when "white" people no longer exist? The second half of Dr. Futurity is basically reduced to a Pocahontas type tale in a futuristic setting, but these types of "white" savoir narratives have certainly lost their appeal. So what started out as a promising exploration of the cultural significance of death transformed into a story about a "white" doctor saving a time traveling "Native American" clan from their own obsession with racial justice...In other words a total mess, in my honest opinion.
That said, this is still an accessible and suspenseful novel, and worth a read for anyone who's a committed Philip K. Dick fan. Even in his less successful works there is always a nugget of good science fiction to enjoy. Also, I love just how awkward Dick writes his female characters. They are often either shrills or sex objects, maybe both, andDr. Futurity continues the Philip K Dick tradition of some cringe inducing writing about the female anatomy. Feast on this line:
"Loris is in her womb now, as I’m looking at her. And one day she will nurse at those superb breasts." 129