The creation of a mirror-image human is the basis of the 1950 short story "
Technical Error" by
Arthur C. Clarke. In this story, a physical accident transforms a person into his mirror image, speculatively explained by travel through a fourth physical dimension.
H. G. Wells'
The Plattner Story (1896) is based on a similar idea. In the 1970
Star Trek novel
Spock Must Die! by
James Blish, the science officer of the
USS Enterprise is replicated in mirror-image form by a transporter mishap. He locks himself in the sick bay where he is able to synthesize mirror-image forms of basic nutrients needed for his survival. An alien machine that reverses chirality, and a blood-symbiont that functions properly only when in one chirality, were central to
Roger Zelazny's 1976 novel
Doorways in the Sand. On the titular planet of
Sheri S. Tepper's 1989 novel
Grass, some lifeforms have evolved to use the right-handed isomer of
alanine. In the
Mass Effect series, chirality of amino acids in foodstuffs is discussed often in both dialogue and encyclopedia files. In the 2014 science fiction novel
Cibola Burn by
James S. A. Corey, the planet Ilus has indigenous life with partially-mirrored chirality. This renders human colonists unable to digest native flora and fauna, and greatly complicates conventional farming. Consequently, the colonists have to rely upon
hydroponic farming and food importation. In the 2017
Daniel Suarez novel
Change Agent, an antagonist, Otto, nicknamed the "Mirror Man", is revealed to be a genetically engineered mirror-image human. Serving as an assassin due to his complete immunity to neurotoxins, which he coats himself with in the form of a cologne-like aerosol, he views other humans with disdain and causes them to feel an inexplicable repulsion by his very presence. The concept is used during
Ryan North's 2023 run on
Fantastic Four as an existential threat towards the human population. ==See also==