Hide this

Results from Google Books

Click on a thumbnail to go to Google Books.

Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said by Philip K. Dick
Loading...

Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said

by Philip K. Dick

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingConversations
1,554132,213 (3.86)22

All member reviews

English (11)  Spanish (1)  German (1)  All languages (13)
Showing 11 of 11
Philip K Dick was an unusual science fiction writer in that, while he tended to write in (usually dystopian) alternative universes, the "space opera" aspect - the act of universe creation (which so obsessed Tolkien, for example) isn't what interests him. If Star Wars was the ultimate piece of fantasy escapism, with a ludicrous morality play veneer thrown in for an emotional punch at the end, then Dick's works tend to exist at the other end of the spectrum: the world is described incidentally, the ingenious devices and drugs means of locomoting and teasing out the existential questions they pose the characters. There is always little bit of scientific hocus pocus thrown in, but never for the sake of it: it is always a means to crystallising Dick's theme.

So Do Androids Dream Of Electric Sheep? isn't, really, a futuristic gumshoe PI noir about killing replicants (though it functions pretty well on that level) but an examination of what really makes us human: what *is* empathy, and what consequences would there be for the way we relate to each other if we could achieve it artificially? And here, in Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said, Dick ruminates on identity: what am *I*, if not a collection of relationships, impulses and memories in other people's minds? - and reality - what, when it comes to it, is the world itself, if not a collection of relations, impulses and memories in *my* brain?

What if we really could alter brains to change these things - how would that alter the way we see ourselves and the world? How, given the limitations of the above view, do we know we cannot? These are big themes, not the sort of thing that science fiction, in the main, handles awfully well. But because Philip Dick is so concerned with his characters, all of whom feel real, human, fallible and contrary - that is, they react in ways we can relate to - it is easy to forget this is a science fiction book at all (it is a matter of record that Philip K Dick despaired of his pigeonholing as a writer of pulp fiction).

Flow My Tears is characteristic of Philip Dick in other respects (not the least its idiosyncratic title!). As in Ubik, The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch and A Scanner Darkly, narcotics - Dick's equivalent of the red and blue pills from Alice's Adventures in Wonderland - play a significant role, and his paranoia, by 1974 well documented and approaching the psychotic, is well on display. Dick tended to portray his futures as governed by dystopian states not out of political disposition or dramatic impetus but, I suspect, because he believed that's where the world was inevitably headed.

Flow my tears isn't a perfect novel - the motivations of secondary characters aren't always easy to divine and it's difficult to know which of Jason Taverner and Felix Buckman is meant to be the "emotional axis" of the book - it feels as though it should be Taverner, but Buckman is drawn as a far more complex and carefully worked out character. Ultimately I would not put it in the same category as The Man in the High Castle or Do Androids Dream Of Electric Sheep?, but it's certainly readable and entertaining and linear in a way that later novels weren't. ( )
  ElectricRay | Dec 20, 2009 |
This book was fantastic. Though it follows the traditional Dick formula of "being out of reality", it takes it in a philosophically new direction. The sense of self is not threatened in Flow My Tears, but rather a person's sense of others; for the protagonist Jason Taverner, that's worse than not knowing who you are.

An amazing book by a literary giant. ( )
  Kunzelman | Sep 6, 2009 |
My favourite Dick novel to date (I've read about 6).

An obnoxious yet famous celebrity wakes up after surgery to find out that no one knows who he is any more. Set in a dystopian police state the novel follows Jason in his increasing desperation to find out why no one knows who he is.

The setting is dated (set in a future world of 1988), with some of the technology long having be superseded, whilst others are still well out of reach. Yet this is just backdrop to the real story so does not really matter.

Well worth the read, only Dicks tripped out mind could think up this story. ( )
  SystemicPlural | Jun 14, 2009 |
@ wirkman:
It reads like a movie too. Somehow all troughout the book it felt more like I was watching a movie than reading a book.
My second PKD (first was Ubik). I thought I was not much of a Si-Fi person, but looking at my tag-cloud Si-Fi seems rather big. Anyway, PKD is brilijant ( )
  dbrouwer | Jun 6, 2009 |
weird
  etrainer | Jun 14, 2008 |
  www.snigel.nu | Nov 17, 2007 |
I've never been a huge sci-fi or fantasy reader, but I do dig PKD. This is one of his best. ( )
  dwfree | Oct 13, 2007 |
This is the book I read that finally solidified my feeling that I don't like PKD. For one thing, I don't really enjoy the pathologically dystopian view in his stories where every human society seems not just corrupt but irredeemable to the core. However, I also realize this was the fashion in the mid '70s so, while it's not to my liking, I can take that part of it as n historical artifact.

The thing that pushed me over the edge to disliking PKD entirely-- once I realized it was his style and not just in a few stories and novels-- can be summed up in one phrase: "Wall-to-wall exposition." Hardly a paragraph goes by when the reader is not preached at, spoken down to, or forced to listen to a boring character monologue which explains concepts, and forces the story points home with a tone that manages to be stilted, condescending, pretentious, and contrived all at once.

But I made it through, so that's something. ( )
  beldon | Apr 11, 2007 |
An amazing short novel by Philip K. Dick. It's been twenty years or more since I've read it -- could it be thirty? -- but it still resonates. This is one of his best Altered Reality novels, and it would make a great movie. ( )
  wirkman | Mar 24, 2007 |
The basic story is familiar -- man wakes up into a world where his existence has been erased -- but I don't know if Dick was the first to write it. In any case, it's a good elaboration on the premise, but with a weak resolution.

If anyone else had written it, I'd give it an extra star, but this just isn't as good as, say, A Scanner Darkly. ( )
  grunin | Jul 15, 2006 |
Showing 11 of 11

Quick Links

Ebooks Audio Swap
3 pay1 pay2/108

Popular covers

 

Help/FAQs | About | Privacy/Terms | Blog | Contact | LibraryThing.com | APIs | WikiThing | Common Knowledge | 46,753,858 books!