Time Out Of Joint

Time Out Of Joint

3.81 of 5 stars 3.81  ·  rating details  ·  3,531 ratings  ·  164 reviews
Ragle Gumm was living with his sister and her family in 1959 solving newspaper puzzles. But his normal life began to change one day, and he noticed things getting really strange. He thought he was losing his mind. But, instead, he was going sane, and the year was 1996.
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Published December 23rd 1987 by Carroll & Graf Publishing (first published 1959)
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A.K.
Phil Dick writing about the fifties is just as good as Phil Dick writing about the sixties, seventies, eighties, etc. The novel starts up more or less in the mainstream (as opposed to SCI FUCKIN FI)
with an occasional whisper of an occasional frisson of some deep wrongness. Curiouser and curiouser, and now the floor drops out. I love how these total squares suss out the fishiness licketysplit then fixate on it like a wholesome yet crazily engrossing family game of mini-golf. With the same pitch...more
Xio
"We can put everything we know together, he realised, but it doesn't tell us anything, except that something is wrong. And we knew that to start with. The clues we are getting don't give us a solution; they only show us how far-reaching the wrongness is."

A neat and welcome dose of paranoia, philosophy, psychology mixed with a nifty little back up story.

You may be reminded of The Truman Show if you read this, but I'm not sticking my toe in that pond (not here, at least. Maybe over at IMDB).

Quic...more
Matthew
I love reading Philip K. Dick, and kind of devoured him during my high school days. And Dick always made me read other things. If I hadn't of read Dick, I wouldn't have discovered who Nathanial West was, and that would have been a shame. After recently reading so many big thick works, with Infinite Jest right behind me, I thought I would dive into a quick Dick read. Although the Hamlet reference is not as overt as that book, don't let that stop you from reading this minor classic in Dick's ouver...more
Eddie Watkins
There's a soft spot in my brain for this early novel by P K Dick, probably his first full treatment of ersatz reality paranoia and the mental instability capable of seeing it for what it is. It reminds me of the movie The Truman Show (which I enjoyed) but is 6 to 8 times more involving and interesting.

One great thing about the book is the lovingly detailed 1950's middle class neighborhood setting (less all the counterculture drugginess of his later books). I don't mind drugs or drugginess, but t...more
Judy

When I was a reckless, drug-taking hippie, I must have been hanging out with the wrong people. How else can I explain that I never heard of Philip K Dick just when I needed him the most?

I have only recently begun to read his heady concoction of science fiction mixed with a sort of Zen spirituality. The message in this somewhat disjointed novel is that one can only life safely in the science fictional universe called "reality" if one is half asleep and gullible as hell.

Ragle Gumm is not quite in...more
Kaan
"Ragle kurtulması gerektiğini biliyordu. Ama... bindiği taksi şehrin sınırlarını geçemiyordu... her nasılsa otobüs bileti kuyruğu hiç azalmıyordu... ve aslında o otobüs gerçekten var mıydı?

Umutsuz bir hareketle kasabadan ayrılmıştı ve yabancı bir eve sığınmıştı. Belki burada bir anda muazzam bir entrikanın öznesi haline gelmiş olduğu yanılsamasını alt edebilirdi...

Sonra televizyonu açtı. Bir eğitim filmi vardı. Kendisinin nasıl teşhis edileceği hakkındaydı..."

Philip K. Dick okunmaya değer bir ad...more
Jaime Nelson
Time Out of Joint by Philip K. Dick

THE TRUMAN SHOW meets THE MATRIX

Synopsis

It’s 1959. Ragle Gum lives with his sister and her family. He’s having an affair with the woman next door. He’s the champion of the newspaper contest, “Where Will the Little Green Man be Next?” Oh yeah, and he’s going sane.

It starts with what he thinks are hallucinations—a disappearing soft drink stand, leaving nothing in its place but a piece of paper labeled SOFT DRINK STAND. But then he hears pilots talking about h...more
Jack Stovold
My Philip K. Dick Project

Entry #14 - Time Out of Joint (written Jan. 1958, published 1959)

This is one of Dick’s best sci-fi novels yet! It moved rapidly, and I couldn’t put it down, ended up reading it in less than two days. Dick’s writing is getting better with each novel. One thing I’ve enjoyed during the course of this project is watching the convergence of Dick’s “literary” and “sci-fi” styles. The beginning of this book reads a lot like Dick’s mainstream novels, albeit in a more compressed...more
Sorana
Are all classical SF books naive by definition? I've only read Arthur C. Clarke, Ray Bradbury and Philip K. Dick until now, but all of them had that naivity of language that made the characters seem somehow plain. I suppose the authors emphasize on the idea and not on the means of delivering it. Anyway, besides what I just mentioned, I really enjoyed this book. I loved the way in which the confusion and the elements of apparently supernatural made their way into the plot and I believe the story...more
Charles Dee Mitchell
Throughout the 1950's, Philip K. Dick continued to write mainstream novels involving working class characters and realistic situations. His agents were never able to place any of these titles with publishers, at least not until several years after Dick's death when the Dickian industry began in earnest and publishers were scrounging for new material. Dick never looked down on his sf output, but he continued to have faith in these realist novels into the 1960's.

Time out of Joint, published in 195...more
Lisa
An enjoyable Truman Show-eque mind-bender (but written way before that film was even a twinkle in someone's eye) that treads ground that Dick fans will be familiar with - Ragle Gumm lives in a small community and makes his living solving where the little green man will be in the daily newspaper competition. When Ragle starts to question his existence following a series of powerful 'hallucinations', it soon becomes apparent that Ragle's world is just a construct designed to keep him docile and co...more
Isabel
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Jim Kinsey
Justified paranoia, things not being what they seem and pulpy 50s Americana makes this an almost perfect novel for those who like Dick's short stories.

According to the excellent afterword this can be considered the first of his more literary, later novels (a sequence including Man in the High Castle and VALIS - good company) as well as bridging the gap somewhat to the earlier work.

I usually read Dick for the atmosphere and ideas, and where those converge in those great capital-M Moments he conju...more
Lyn
Philip K. Dick's Time Out of Joint may very well have influenced the producers of the film The Truman Show. Orson Scott Card may also have gotten some ideas for Ender's Game. PKD tells this one close to the vest for the first half of the book, slowly developing the action and leaving some M. Night Shyamalan type clues along the way for the reader to pick up. This was published in 1959, one of his earlier novels and an observant reader of PKD will notice a more subtle approach than some of his la...more
Zoroasterxiv
Science fiction has the potential to unlock the power of the human imagination, but it is only valuable the hoity-toity literary types like me when the prose and the themes are comparable to the great realist fiction. I feel like Dick does not hit it here; much of the writing felt like scaffolding (first this happened, then this happened, then the big reveal at the end). I remember liking Do Androids Dream considerably more, but then again, that was written nine years after this, when Dick was p...more
Katrina
Recommended by a colleague at work, I wanted something different to read that had little romance or fantastical elements to it.

This was perfect. We're introduced to the seemingly normal life of Ragle Gumm who lives with his sister, Margo and her husband Vic. Instead of having a normal job, Ragle enters the daily competition in the local newspaper and somehow manages to win every single day.

Bill Black, the next door neighbour is always popping round with his wife, Junie and making sure Ragle gets...more
Kian
Here's a novelty - Dick managed to write a novel for which the main narrative mechanic did not revolve around drugs! Time Out of Joint is part science-fiction, part mystery, part alternative-reality, where the main protagonist, a man who completes competition puzzles for a living, starts to pick apart the reality around him.

The story is good. It's mostly linear, and involves moments of the surreal. Unusually these surreal moments are later explained in a perfectly straightforward manner, somethi...more
Luis C
Mar 16, 2013 Luis C rated it 2 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: Hardcore fans of sci-fi
Recommended to Luis by: Jaime Agudo villanueva
La sensación que tengo del libro es que es un poco deslabazado. No sé cuanto tardó el autor en escribirlo, pero no me extrañaría que fuese en dos meses.

Es mi primer libro de Philip K Dick y veo por qué tiene fama: la trama de este libro se adentra en lo filosófico / metafísico y eso le da cierta profundidad, aunque en este caso en particular es un poco pastiche.

El comienzo de la trama es aburrida hasta decir basta, y luego la novela progresa gracias a la maestría del autor para ir soltando dato...more
K.Edwin Fritz
Much more stable than Dick's "VALIS" (my first venture into his strange mind), I enjoyed this simple Dystopian Society story. Not that 'simple' should ever be used to describe a PKD story.

In Time Out of Joint, Reagle Gumm is a perennial contest winner who is so obsessed with his contest that he spends all day every day ensuring that he continues his streak. But readers know something is weird because certain things about Gumm's world aren't right, primarily the lack of radios and other such eas...more
Ema
I picked this book from my brother's library, while I was visiting my parents in my home town. He used to be a SF fan back in high-school, too bad he didn't have any idea what books to buy, thus Time Out of Joint seemed the most appealing novel from the stack.

Being my first PKD read, I didn't know what to expect. I was cautious at first, not sure about the domestic scenes that seemed to stretch a little bit too much, but my patience was eventually rewarded, as the plot began to unfold and from...more
Saretta
Molto spesso Dick gioca sui diversi livelli di realtà con risultati più o meno lineari e comprensibili (questo romanzo ricade nella seconda categoria).
Ragle e la sua famiglia vivono in una cittadina americana anni '50 da cartolina e lui per vivere partecipa (e vince) al concorso che compare quotidianamente sul quotidiano locale, la loro vita trascorre serena.
Però c'è qualcosa che non torna, dei piccoli dettagli che fanno pensare a un'altra e molto diversa realtà; a questo punto iniziano paranoia...more
Mark Schnell
I found I could not put this book down. Because if I did, I would not remember what had gone before if I picked the book up again to resume reading. Since it was difficult to foresee where the author was heading with the story, little details as I read them seemed inconsequential and thus I did not retain them well in memory. If Mr. Dick was trying to convey the sense of disorientation the protagonist felt to the reader, he succeeded admirably.

I was not disappointed with the ending, as some rev...more
James
Time Out of Joint is an early work of sci-fi by one of the undisputed masters of the genre, Philip K. Dick. Like some of his later works such as The Man in the High Castle and Ubik, Time Out of Joint is concerned with the nature of reality and how much one can truly know it.

The central character lives in an idyllic suburban town, which itself is Dick's satire on the materialistic and escapist suburbs of 1950s California, but ultimately finds out that things are not as they seem. Without too man...more
Corey Pung
Out of the many books I’ve read by him, Time Out of Joint is my favorite, and it’s the one I’d call essential reading. It’s maybe not critically his best work, as Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep is written better and Martian Time Slip is more chilling and suspenseful, but Time Out of Joint has its own charm. The title is right out of Hamlet. The main character fills in crossword puzzles for his occupation. There’s a gang of young people appearing at the end that inspired Anthony Burgess to w...more
Amanda
I really didn't know what to expect from this book, it was a gift and knowing myself I probably wouldn't of had picked it up in a bookstore. But I was pleasantly surprised, I loved the concept and the way it was developed. The characters were shaped well and I loved to read from each characters point of view, adding a nice depth to the story. The book kept you interested from beginging to end trying to figure out what is actually going on. I was more amused than anything about how the "future" w...more
Rob
Good in parts. The description of first slight but then growing unease in a perfect 50's world (written in the 50's mind you) is a great piece of writing. So often Dick is lauded for his ideas but he can write as well as Austen or Dickens. I have to think that this is an allegory for his times. A perfect time but with a dark underbelly that everyone agreed to not talk about. At various times the characters ask why they did not question the growing sense of unease.

To be sure this is probably Dick...more
Calvin
The only thing I don't like about Philip K. Dick's "Time Out of Joint" so far is that the synopsis published on the back -- as well as the one here on Goodreads! -- gives away something that the author himself doesn't reveal, except very gradually, for several chapters. So what if it doesn't really sound science-fiction-y unless you give that part away? I think it would be a much better reading experience for anybody picking up the book if they could somehow avoid reading any synopsis at all, an...more
Edward Keller
This is a book a reread every few years. It's awesome on all levels: on the level of social realism, before stuff goes bonkers (that's Dick the 'real writer' doing his thing); then on the level of stuff going bonkers (would look great with today's TV effects); the plot twist (not quite mind blowing today, but genius in the late 1950's); and his off-hand prediction of how youth subcultures look in the future. To the t. Man's a prophet even when he's just messing around.
Philip Dick, together with...more
Peter Walton-Jones
Classic sci-fi from the PKD mind. Not totally whacked out like some of the later stuff and a good early take on altered realities. The apparent setting is the 1950s, the real time 1998 after the moon has been colonised. Perhaps typically humans have taken up a form of war between the colonies of the moon and the people on earth. The main protagonist does not really know who he is until some strange things happen...and keep happening, which cause him to question and investigate. The ending is a l...more
Mark Romano
An interesting early novel from Philip Dick. I thoroughly enjoyed Dick's ability to create a peaceful small town during the 1950s and then piece by piece destroy the illusion in a very bizarre manner. The man character is a man who has come to believe that there is a conspiracy behind the illusory world he lives in. I am not sure who wrote the Truman Show, but they clearly plagiarized this novel. The theme is the same and there are events taken without change from the novel: specifically, when T...more
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Time Out of Joint (Paperback)
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Zeit Aus Den Fugen (Paperback)
Time Out of Joint (Paperback)

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Philip K. Dick was born in Chicago in 1928 and lived most of his life in California. He briefly attended the University of California, but dropped out before completing any classes. In 1952, he began writing professionally and proceeded to write numerous novels and short-story collections. He won the Hugo Award for the best novel in 1962 for The Man in the High Castle and the John W. Campbell Memo...more
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