Time Out of Joint

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Time Out of Joint

Cover of first edition (hardcover)
Author Philip K. Dick
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Genre(s) Science fiction
Publisher J. B. Lippincott Company
Publication date 1959
Media type Print (Hardcover & Paperback)
Pages 221 pp
ISBN NA
Cover of 1977 Belmont paperback edition.
Cover of 1977 Belmont paperback edition.

Time Out of Joint is a novel by Philip K. Dick, first published in novel form in the United States in 1959. It was also serialised in the British science fiction magazine New Worlds Science Fiction in several installments from 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]).

Several of the novels themes and ideas were used for the basis of the award-winning 1998 film, The Truman Show, starring Jim Carrey, about a man who discovers that his entire life is an elaborate soap opera.

[edit] Plot summary

As the novel opens, its protagonist 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 featuring the following question: "Where will the little green man be next?" However, at intervals some object around him, like a drink 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. Other mysterious events occur, including references to objects (such as Marilyn Monroe) that would be anachronisms in 1959 and the mention of the name Ragle Gumm by people who have no apparent reason to do so, including military air pilots.

Confusion gradually mounts for Gumm; one of his neighbours, observing this, starts worrying: "What if Gumm were becoming sane?" In fact, Gumm does become sane, and the deception surrounding 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 frightening fact that he lives on a then-future Earth (c. 1998) that is embroiled in a colonial war of independence with the Moon. This is comparable to England's war against the American Revolutionaries. Amazingly, Gumm's is the only consistently accurate method for predicting where nuclear strikes will be aimed, in that his 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. Once he has learned the truth, Gumm defects to the Lunar colonists. There is an indication that the war might end.

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