Back again to PKD again with this one, and it's another of his fifties novels. And this one's a bit different.
The story features Ragle Gumm, a man with a very unique job, in which he wins a newspaper contest, every single day. But when he's not consulting the charts and tables he has, he usually enjoys his life in a small town in '59. Or so he thought.
Strange things start to happen, he finds old phone books with the numbers disconnected, a magazine featuring a starlet name Marilyn Monroe, whom he's never heard of. And then, everyday objects start to vanish, only to be replaced by strips of paper with words written on them that say "bowl of flowers" and "soft-drink stand".
And when he skips town to find out what's causing it, he will make a discovery that will question everything that he ever knew.
"Time Out Of Joint" is still very trippy, but it has more of thriller feel to it. And it immediately brings to mind a couple of his later novels, like "Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?", that also has a heavy noir influence, and "A Scanner Darkly". But that one theme, the theme of the fragile balance of reality, is always still present.
Really feels like something from out of the Matrix movies, (and of course Phil's work did influence movies like "The Matrix" and of the whole cyber punk sub genre) and that makes it all the more interesting! Definitely enjoyed this one even if it's not one of his greatest works. And that what will probably be the last PKD book for me right now, as I'm about to get back into Dan Simmons's Hyperion series.
by i-the-muso-1968