Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said
Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said | Philip K. Dick
11 posts | 37 read | 14 to read
Jason Taverner is a Six, the result of top-secret government experiments forty years before that produced a handful of unnaturally bright and beautiful people - and he's the prime-time idol of millions until, inexplicably, all record of him is wiped from the data banks of Earth. Suddenly he is a man with no identity, in a police state where everyone is closely monitored. Can he ever be rich and famous again? Or are those memories just an illusion?
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
review
Decalino
post image
Mehso-so

This unsettling novel felt like a 1970s Twilight Zone episode. Jason Taverner, famous musician and TV personality, wakes up in a shabby hotel room. No one knows who he is and he has no ID, a serious problem in a police state where ID is mandatory. The ultimate explanation was interesting but I didn't love this one--it left a bad taste and short as it was, it was a relief when it ended.

RamsFan1963 One of my all time favorite book titles. 8mo
Decalino @RamsFan1963 The title is pretty cool! 8mo
26 likes2 comments
blurb
RamsFan1963
post image

1. Greece and The Philippines. I did have plans, but now everything is on hold until next year.
2. I'm grateful that I still have a job (even when I complain about it), my health and that I have an abundance of books to enjoy.
@audraelizabeth @Buechersuechtling @ReadingIsMyHobby @Onceuponatime @TheBookDream @Daisey @Bookishlie

#thankfulthursday @Cosmos_Moon

Cosmos_Moon_River Hope your plans pan out well soon and we can all get through this craziness! Thanks for playing 🥰 4y
39 likes1 stack add1 comment
quote
LiterRohde
post image

“Grief reunites you with what you've lost. It's a merging; you go with the loved thing or person. You follow it a far as you can go. But finally, the grief goes away and you phase back into the world. you don't ever completely come back from where you went - a fragment broken off your pulsing, pumping heart is there still. A cut that never heals.”

#AyUpAugust | 1: #CryMeARiver

📷: Made with Typorama

squirrelbrain Love the pic of the broken piano 💔 5y
Cinfhen So true 😢😢😢😢 5y
45 likes2 comments
blurb
TrishB
post image

My brother calls me Trash.....
Tagged 👍🏻
Yes!! Sometimes the hype sets up unrealistic expectations and then I feel let down. Either have to read right after publication or leave for a while!
I can be seduced into buying a book by the cover...it won‘t change my mind about what I think about the book though.
Anyone who hasn‘t played 😁
Thanks for tag @Birdsong28
#wondrouswednesday (sorry it‘s late!)

JennyM My brother calls me Jenitals! 😆😆😆 (edited) 5y
OrangeMooseReads That sounds like something my brother would do but it wouldn‘t be endearing 5y
TrishB @JennyM that made me giggle 🤭 that‘s definitely worse! 5y
See All 8 Comments
TrishB @OrangeMooseReads I think age has made it endearing 🤷‍♀️ 5y
OrangeMooseReads @TrishB I meant that my brother wouldn‘t have meant it endearing even over time that‘s the way he is 5y
Eggs That is an unusual title!! Thanks for joining in 🤗💗 5y
LeahBergen @JennyM @TrishB 😆😂😆😂 5y
TrishB @LeahBergen gotta love the siblings!! 5y
70 likes1 stack add8 comments
review
Creadnorthey
post image
Mehso-so

This doesn‘t go on my list of PKD favorites. This one is a bit of a mess- like I said in an earlier post; amateur psycho-babble with strong unhinged chauvinistic overtones, dragged through a myriad of plot holes; usually a huge fan of PKD, maybe this is just where my head is at in early 2019! Happy New Year everybody!

review
swynn
post image
Pickpick

(1975) Television celebrity Jason Taverner wakes up in a cheap dingy hotel room, to a world where he doesn't exist. Nobody recognizes him, and even his closest friends and aquaintances have never heard of him. It's an unsettling piece of near-future science fiction that unravels into speculation about the relationship between perception and reality. It's among my favorites of PKD's works.

RamsFan1963 ....Also one of the best book titles ever. 6y
swynn @RamsFan1963 Agreed. It's unusual, intriguing, and does the text perfectly. 6y
22 likes1 stack add2 comments
blurb
Creadnorthey

This is oddly enjoyable though I'm finding it hard to make any sense of. What between the layman's psycho-babble, the chauvinistic tough-guy noir cliche, and made up words (quibble? and thungly?) I certainly know I'm not in Kansas anymore... and like our protagonist Jason (on a quest like his Argonaut namesake) I'm wondering how this will all turn out!

blurb
underthebelljar
post image

My boyfriend is reading this book right now and when he got to this part he had to show me this quote 😂 #BOTM mentioned in a book!

blurb
TrishB
post image

#madworld #lyricalapril
@Cinfhen
So it's a mad world and tears (for fears).....😀

minkyb This is the best! 8y
Cinfhen Nicely played, my friend 💞💞 8y
TrishB @minkyb @Cinfhen our book cases have become very familiar over the past couple of weeks with these challenges!! 8y
80 likes3 comments
blurb
KVanRead
post image

This ought to be Heart of Darkness, cuz all I can say is, "The horror! The horror!" #uglybookcover #uglybookcovers #somethingforsept #septphotochallenge @RealLifeReading

LeahBergen 😂 8y
britt_brooke Yikes. 8y
annahenke Love your comment! Haha 8y
See All 7 Comments
RealLifeReading 😂😂brilliant 8y
SusanInTiburon See, this is exactly why some of us never developed a sci fi habit. 8y
TheBookDream I am about to post mine and it is also a vintage science fiction cover. Vintage scifi is a special kind of blend of awful/amaze balls. 8y
KVanRead @TheBookDream They really are kind of glorious. @SusanInTiburon Exactly 😂 8y
52 likes7 comments
review
bookwrm526
Mehso-so

It's my last day of freedom before the semester starts so I'm trying to finish a bunch of things today, and this was first on the list. It's not my favorite by PKD, and I actually pretty much hated it until the last three chapters or so, but the ending was pretty good. I've read others by him I liked far better so this won't put me off reading more.