Time out of Joint

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Time Out of Joint
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Time Out of Joint

Time Out of Joint is a novel by Philip K. Dick originally serialised in the British science fiction magazine New Worlds Science Fiction (December 1959 to February 1960).

The novel epitomises many of Dick's themes, with its concern about the nature of reality, and ordinary people in ordinary lives having the world unravel around them. The title is a reference to what Hamlet says to Horatio after being visited by his father's ghost, and learning that his uncle Claudius murdered his father; in short, a shocking supernatural event that fundamentally alters the way Hamlet perceives the state and the universe ("The time is out of joint; O cursed spite!/That ever I was born to set it right!" [I.V.211-2]).

[edit] Plot summary

As the novel opens, its hero Ragle Gumm believes that he lives in the year 1959 in a quiet American suburb. His unusual occupation consists of repeatedly winning the cash prize in a local newspaper competition, "Where will the little green man be next?" However, he has a problem: every now and then, some object around him, like a hot dog stand in the local park, fades away into nothingness, leaving behind only a small slip of paper with the name of the object printed on it. There are other mysterious aspects: children exploring the basement of an old, ruined house nearby find a pile of magazines. One features an actress, apparently well-known, who Gumm has never heard of, named Marilyn Monroe.

Confusion gradually mounts for Gumm, and the plot then moves to one of his neighbours observing this, who starts worrying: "What if Gumm were becoming sane?" In fact, Gumm does become sane, and the deception around him (erected to both protect and exploit him) begins to unravel.

Gumm eventually learns that the idyllic neighborhood he lives in is a construct designed to protect him from the terrible fact that he lives on a then-future Earth (c. 1997) that is embroiled in a colonial war of independence with the Moon. Amazingly, Gumm is the only consistently accurate method for predicting where nuclear strikes will be aimed at, and his newspaper puzzle solving skills have saved untold thousands of lives over the years through enabling antimissile deflection. The town provides a psychological safety blanket that allows him to perform this task without understanding his dire responsibility (similar to Ender Wiggin in Orson Scott Card's Ender's Game). Once he does so, Gumm defects to the Lunar colonists, and there is an indication that the war might end.

[edit] Allusions/references from other works

The Truman Show bears a striking resemblance to Gumm's circumstances.


Books by Philip K. Dick
Gather Yourselves Together | Voices From the Street | Vulcan's Hammer | Dr. Futurity | The Cosmic Puppets | Solar Lottery | Mary and the Giant | The World Jones Made | Eye in the Sky | The Man Who Japed | A Time for George Stavros | Pilgrim on the Hill | The Broken Bubble | Puttering About in a Small Land | Nicholas and the Higs | Time Out of Joint | In Milton Lumky Territory | Confessions of a Crap Artist | The Man Whose Teeth Were All Exactly Alike | Humpty Dumpty in Oakland | The Man in the High Castle | We Can Build You | Martian Time-Slip | Dr. Bloodmoney, or How We Got Along After the Bomb | The Game-Players of Titan | The Simulacra | The Crack in Space | Now Wait for Last Year | Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? | Clans of the Alphane Moon | The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch | The Zap Gun | The Penultimate Truth | Deus Irae | The Unteleported Man | The Ganymede Takeover | Counter-Clock World | Nick and the Glimmung | Ubik | Galactic Pot-Healer | A Maze of Death | Our Friends from Frolix 8 | Flow My Tears, The Policeman Said | A Scanner Darkly | Radio Free Albemuth | VALIS | The Divine Invasion | The Transmigration of Timothy Archer
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