(#172756) FLOW MY TEARS, THE POLICEMAN SAID. Philip K. Dick.

FLOW MY TEARS, THE POLICEMAN SAID. Garden City: Doubleday & Company, Inc., 1974. Octavo, cloth. First edition. "One day in 1988, the nation's top TV star wakes up to find himself unknown. No one has heard of him, there is no record of birth, he has no identification to show the omnipresent police. IN FLOW MY TEARS, THE POLICEMAN SAID, Philip K. Dick has written a proficient tale of an America taken over by data banks and bureaucrats. College students and professors have been ruthlessly separated from society, as a former advocate of law-and-order once proposed. In this dark future, all blacks are sterilized after the birth of their first child. By the time the hero finds himself an unperson, blacks are an endangered species, treated much as the whooping crane is today. But the sociological comment is only background; the real problem is whether Jason Taverner is the victim of a plot or a skid-row bum who dreams that he is a TV star. A recommended slide toward solipsism." - E. H. in Psychology Today, June, 1974. 1974 Nebula and 1975 Hugo nominee. Winner of the 1975 John W. Campbell Award. Anatomy of Wonder (2004) II-329. Survey of Science Fiction Literature II, pp. 797-801. A fine copy in fine dust jacket (priced $6.95 on the front flap) with a touch of rubbing to the black background ink at spine ends and front corner tips. (#172756).

Price: $850.00

Printing identification statement for this book:
First edition so stated on copyright page.