Hitchhiker: A Biography of Douglas Adams

by M. J. Simpson

Hardcover, 2003

Status

Available

Call number

823.914

Collection

Publication

Justin, Charles & Co. (2003), Edition: First U.S. Edition, Hardcover, 382 pages

Description

Douglas Adams will be most fondly remembered for the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy series and its idiosyncratic humour, but this biography covers his life from his days as a struggling sketch writer to his untimely death at the age of 49 in May 2001.

User reviews

LibraryThing member the.ken.petersen
I had saved this book for months: a special treat and, perhaps because I had built it up so much, it disappointed.
When I read a biography, I like to put the book down with a feeling that I know the subject as a person. I do not know whether it is a fault of the writer, or a sign of Adams'
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protection of his personal life, but whilst this book is packed with, "the dinner guest's guide to boring his/her fellow diners with little known facts and corrections of popular stories about DNA", I know Douglas no more than when I started.
Mr Simpson seems to be amazed that the stories that we all tell about our lives are not some gospel version of the events: ask my ex-wife for the details of our divorce, and I am sure that you will soon find it to be at odds with mine and yet, we both truly hold ours to be de facto.
Douglas, we are informed began life as a committed Christian and ended his life as an atheist. That is it. The interesting question as to why is never broached.
Adams was notorious for keeping his publishers waiting: was this because he was a perfectionist, a lazy man who took the advance, but didn't want to work, or trapped by the expectation of yet another Hitch Hiker book? No clue is given.
Then, it is almost half way through the book before Douglas has any relationship with a female. I was beginning to think that Simpson was going to announce that he was gay; but no, he now advises us that Douglas has had numerous girlfriends. Nothing more is said of these until the Author's Afterword, where it is implied that HHG2G came to Douglas whilst involved in congress with a Dutch girl, in Greece in 1973.
Another cause of confusion is the author's curious attitude to a time line. I know that Douglas is most famous for his si-fi works, but one minute we are in 1991 and the next 1979.
If anyone were to be rash enough to read this revue, they may , by now, suppose that I would suggest that this book be left upon the shelf. Wrong: it does deliver some insights into Adams - just don't expect 42.
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LibraryThing member andrewlorien
Meticulously researched. not funny. very enlightening.

Awards

British Science Fiction Association Award (Shortlist — Non-Fiction — 2003)

Original publication date

2003

Physical description

382 p.; 9.48 inches

ISBN

1932112170 / 9781932112177
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