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{{Short description|1959 novel by Philip K. Dick}} {{More citations needed|date=July 2007}} {{Use mdy dates|date=March 2025}} {{Infobox book | | name = Time Out of Joint | title_orig = | translator = | image = TimeOutOfJoint(1sEd).jpg | caption = Cover of first edition (hardcover) | author = [[Philip K. Dick]] | illustrator = | cover_artist = Arthur Hawkins | country = United States | language = English | series = | publisher = [[J. B. Lippincott & Co.|J. B. Lippincott Company]] | release_date = 1959 |genre = Science fiction | english_release_date = | media_type = Print (hardback & paperback) | pages = 221 | preceded_by = | followed_by = }} '''''Time Out of Joint''''' is a [[science fiction]] novel by American writer [[Philip K. Dick]], first published in novel form in the United States in 1959. An [[abridgement|abridged]] version was also serialised in the British [[science fiction magazine]] ''[[New Worlds (magazine)|New Worlds Science Fiction]]'' in several installments from December 1959 to February 1960. The novel epitomizes many of Dick's themes with its concerns about the nature of reality and ordinary people in ordinary lives having the world unravel around them.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Canaan |first1=Howard |title=Time and Gnosis in the Writings of Philip K. Dick |journal=Hungarian Journal of English and American Studies |date=2008 |volume=14 |issue=2 |pages=335–355 |jstor=41274434 |issn=1218-7364}}</ref> The title is a reference to [[William Shakespeare|Shakespeare]]'s play ''[[Hamlet]]''.<ref>{{cite web |title=From Cold Comfort Farm to Infinite Jest: ten novels with titles from Shakespeare |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/books/what-to-read/ten-novels-that-took-their-titles-from-shakespeare/time-out-of-joint-by-philip-k-dick-1959/ |website=The Telegraph |access-date=13 August 2020 |date=24 March 2016}}</ref> The line is uttered by Hamlet 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]), much as do several events in the novel. ==Plot summary== [[Image:PKD-Time-Out-of-Joint.png|thumb|left|150px|Cover of 1977 Belmont paperback edition]] Ragle Gumm lives in the year 1959 in a quiet American town. His unusual profession consists of repeatedly winning the cash prize in a national newspaper contest called "Where Will The Little Green Man Be Next?". Gumm's 1959 has some differences from ours: the [[1948 Tucker Sedan|Tucker]] car is in production, AM/FM [[radio]]s are scarce to non-existent, and [[Marilyn Monroe]] is a complete unknown. As the novel opens, strange things begin to happen to Gumm. A [[soft-drink]] stand disappears, replaced by a small slip of paper with the words "SOFT-DRINK STAND" printed on it in [[block letters]]. Intriguing little pieces of the real 1959 turn up: a magazine article on Marilyn Monroe, a [[telephone book]] with non-operational [[Telephone exchange|exchanges]] listed and radios hidden away in someone else's house. People with no apparent connection to Gumm, including military pilots using aircraft [[transceiver]]s, refer to him by name. Few other characters notice these or experience similar anomalies; the sole exception is Gumm's supposed [[brother-in-law]], Victor "Vic" Nielson, in whom he confides. A neighborhood woman, Mrs. Keitelbein, invites him to a [[civil defense]] class where he sees a model of a futuristic underground military factory. He has the unshakeable feeling he's been inside that building many times before. Confusion gradually mounts for Gumm. His neighbor Bill Black knows far more about these events than he admits, and, observing this, begins worrying: "Suppose Ragle [Gumm] is becoming sane again?" In fact, Gumm does become sane, and the deception surrounding him (erected to protect and exploit him) begins to unravel. Gumm tries to escape the town and is turned back by [[Kafkaesque]] obstructions. He sees a copy of ''Time'' magazine, with himself on the cover as Man of the Year, in a [[military uniform]], at the factory depicted in the model. He tries a second time to escape, this time with Vic, and succeeds. He learns that his idyllic town is a [[constructed reality]] designed to protect him from the frightening fact that he lives on a then-future Earth (circa 1998) that is at war against [[Colonization of the Moon|lunar colonists]] who are fighting for a permanent lunar settlement, politically independent from Earth. Gumm has a unique ability to predict where the colonists' [[Nuclear warfare|nuclear strikes]] will be aimed. Previously Gumm did this work for the military, but then he [[Defection|defected]] to the colonists' side and planned to secretly emigrate to the Moon. But before this could happen, he began retreating into a fantasy world based largely upon the relatively idyllic surroundings of his extreme youth. He was no longer able to shoulder his responsibility as Earth's lone protector from Lunar-launched nuclear offensives. The fake town was thereby created on the ruins of [[Kemmerer, Wyoming]], to accommodate and rationalize his retreat to childhood so that he could continue predicting nuclear strikes in the guise of submitting entries to a harmless newspaper contest and without the ethical qualms involved with being on the "wrong" side of a [[civil war]]. While Gumm regressed by himself to a 1950s mindset, the rest of the town with a few exceptions like Black were all put in a similar state artificially, explaining why hardly anyone else could perceive anomalies. When Gumm finally remembers his true personal history, he decides to emigrate to the Moon after all because he feels that exploration and migration, as basic [[Impulse (psychology)|human impulses]], should never be denied to people by any national or planetary government. Vic rejects this belief, referring to the colonists essentially as aggressors and terrorists, and returns to the simulated town - which has lost its ''[[wikt:raison d'être|raison d'etre]]'' because of Gumm's escape from its environs. The book ends with some hope for peace, because the Lunar colonists are more willing to negotiate than Earth's "One Happy World" regime has been telling its citizens. ==Reception== [[David Langford|Dave Langford]] reviewed ''Time Out of Joint'' for ''[[White Dwarf (magazine)|White Dwarf]]'' #57, and stated that "there are classic moments, as when reality blows a fuse and a soft-drink stand disintegrates before Gumm's eyes, leaving only a bit of paper with the words SOFT-DRINK STAND."<ref name="WD57">{{cite journal | last =Langford | first =Dave | author-link =David Langford | title =Critical Mass | journal =[[White Dwarf (magazine)|White Dwarf]] | issue =57 | pages =14 | publisher =[[Games Workshop]] | date = September 1984 }}</ref> [[Colin Greenland]] reviewed ''Time Out of Joint'' for ''[[Imagine (game magazine)|Imagine]]'' magazine, and stated that "As usual, Dick's deadpan investigation of a paranoid world reveals more than a little of the unreal dimensions of our own 'safe' environments."<ref name="Imagine18">{{cite journal | last = Greenland|first = Colin |author-link=Colin Greenland| title =Fantasy Media | type = review | journal = [[Imagine (AD&D magazine)|Imagine]] | issue = 18| pages =47 | publisher = TSR Hobbies (UK), Ltd. |date=September 1984| issn = }}</ref> ==See also== {{portal|Novels}} *''[[Thing-in-itself|Ding an sich]]'', a concept mentioned in the story. *[[Simulated reality]] *Other works of fiction with a [[Simulation|constructed reality]]: **[[They (Heinlein)|"They"]], a 1941 story by [[Robert A. Heinlein]] about a man surrounded by persons whose job is to convince him that he is insane rather than one of the few genuine people in his world. **''[[The Truman Show]]'', a 1998 American comedy-drama film that chronicles the life of a man who discovers he is living in a constructed reality [[soap opera]], televised 24/7. **''[[EDtv]]'', a 1999 American comedy film about a man whose life gets turned into a TV show. **''[[The Incident (2014 film)|The Incident]]'', a 2014 Mexican film in which the book notably appears, about people trapped in an infinite loop. **''[[Don't Worry Darling]]'', a 2022 American psychological thriller film about a 1950s housewife who discovers she is living against her will in a [[virtual reality]] constructed in the modern day. ==Sources== *Rossi, Umberto, "Just a Bunch of Words: The Image of the Secluded Family and the Problem of logos in P.K. Dick's ''Time Out of Joint''", ''Extrapolation'', Vol. 37 No. 3, Fall 1996. *Rossi, Umberto, “The Harmless Yank Hobby: Maps, Games, Missiles and Sundry Paranoias in ''Time Out of Joint'' and ''Gravity’s Rainbow''”, ''Pynchon Notes'' #52–53, Spring-Fall 2003, pp. 106–123 ==References== {{reflist}} ==External links== *{{ISFDB title|id=9502}} *[https://web.archive.org/web/20070208184519/http://www.philipkdick.com/works_novels_timeoutofjoint.html Summary at official PKD website] *[http://www.pkdickbooks.com/SFnovels/time_out_of_joint.php ''Time Out of Joint'' cover art gallery] {{Philip K. Dick}} {{Authority control}} [[Category:Novels about virtual reality]] [[Category:1959 American novels]] [[Category:1959 science fiction novels]] [[Category:American science fiction novels]] [[Category:Dystopian novels]] [[Category:Novels by Philip K. Dick]] [[Category:J. B. Lippincott & Co. books]] [[Category:Novels set on the Moon]]
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