Monday, June 27, 2011

Douglas Adams' The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy

A(n uninspiring) milestone in my literary career: finally read The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, which I read in 2.5 hours. Up til page 41 I found the book juvenile, boring, and silly, and felt that this was probably because I am not a prepubescent boy (no offense to you males). The first line that changed my opinion somewhat was "The robot camera honed in for a close-up on the more popular of [Zaphod's] two heads and he waved again." I suspect my satisfaction with this line is because it is atypically Philip K. Dick-esque (c.f. The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch). I found the rest of this book a mix of mediocre and mildly amusing. I really don't understand the enthusiasm people feel for this work, and this is coming from a blogger who ends most posts with "Highly recommend!" The only intriguing character for me was Zaphod, although he could not redeem this book for me. Would not recommend.

8 comments:

  1. You have nothing to say about this?

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  2. You must have left this comment when I saved a draft to prevent the possible irritation of losing the post to this irritatingly slow computer's intermittent failures.

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  3. also I think this means we can't be friends

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  4. test of my interest in being your friend: how old were you when you last read this book?

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  5. probably like 12 but I'm going to read it now so I can say how awesome it still is.

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  6. somehow I am not completely sure you will be unbiased in your judgment.

    p.s. "felt that this was probably because I am not a prepubescent boy" - how insightful of me :)

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  7. Well, I read it a long time ago, though not when I was prepubescent, but thought it was a certified laff riot. (Humor of this type has some screamingly funny parts but can't help having and some parts that don't work).

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  8. This book is sheer brilliance. Seriously. "The yellow ships hung in the air in much the same way as bricks don't."

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