Books
Ray Loriga

Tokyo Doesn't Love Us Anymore

This dreamlike dystopian novel “shines a dark spotlight on the modern allure of pharmaceuticals’ seeming power to assuage all ills” (Booklist).
Set in the very near future, this is the story of a traveling salesman floating from arid Arizona parking lots to steamy Bangkok bars and beyond to peddle the hottest new commodity for a group known only as The Company. What he has is a drug that erases memory. You can choose your oblivion, be it one mistake or a lifetime of pain. But things become hazy when our hero begins sampling the goods and reaches the point where he can’t even remember what it is he cannot remember.
A pitch-perfect piece for our times filled with hypnotic prose, Tokyo Doesn’t Love Us Anymore is both a riveting story and a thoughtful exploration of the drug culture that surrounds us, the nature of forgetfulness, and the implacable tyranny of emotions—questioning what it means to be human when everything, including human identity, can be bought.
“Part crime novel, part political allegory, part love story . . . Compelling.” —The New York Times Book Review
258 printed pages
Original publication
2007
Publication year
2007
Have you already read it? How did you like it?
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Quotes

  • hazelnutmilktaehas quoted7 years ago
    Sadness has no end, happiness does.
  • hazelnutmilktaehas quoted7 years ago
    There were two identical girls in the swimming pool wearing identical yellow swimming costumes. When one of them dived into the water the other one would get out, so that there was always the same girl in and out of the water at the same time.
  • hazelnutmilktaehas quoted7 years ago
    Ever since the newspapers started saying that the world is going to end, songs have seemed shorter and the days longer
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