Book Review: The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
Bestseller 1978
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It is a famous reality that things are now not usually what they seem. For instance, on the planet Earth, the man had constantly assumed that he used to be extra shrewd than dolphins due to the fact he had performed so a whole lot - the wheel,fire, wars, and so on - while all the dolphins had ever achieved used to be muck about in the water having a precise time. But conversely, the dolphins had continually believed that they had been a long way extra sensible than man - for exactly the equal reasons.
GENRE: Fiction
AUTHOR: Douglas Adams
PAGES: 180
YEAR OF PUBLISH: 1979
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
SUMMARY OF THE HITCHHIKER'S GUIDE TO GALAXY
The Story starts with Arthur Dent, who worked in local radio and has been living in the house for three years. It hadn’t properly registered with Arthur that the council wanted to knock his house down and build a bypass. It was a Thursday morning that he blearily woke up, opened the window, saw a bulldozer, found his slippers, and stomped off to the bathroom to wash. However, he was later found lying in front of the bulldozer in his garden path.
His friend Ford Prefect, who was actually the last remaining survivor of the planet somewhere in the Betelguise part of the galaxy, arrives at the scene with something very important to tell Arthur. Ford tries to trick the Union representative Mr. L Prosser who was there to demolish Arthur’s house because it was decided 9 months ago and the plans were in the display department – which is in the cellar, ‘where the plans were on display in the bottom of a locked filing cabinet in a disused lavatory with a sign on the door saying Beware the Leopard’. Ford tricks and takes Arthur to the local pub. He tells him where he really is from, shows him the electronic book he has called the ‘The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy’ which is like an encyclopedia with the words ‘DON’T PANIC’ written in bold on the cover and that in a few minutes the earth is going to be destroyed by Vogons. This was because the Galactic Hyperspace Planning commission wants to build a Hyperspatial express route and earth was in the way and the plans were available there in the Alpha Centauri office for a few years now.
Meanwhile, in the other part of the galaxy, the president Zaphod Beeblebrox steals a new ship called Heart of Gold, which completely changes the way of hyperspace travel, can take anyone anywhere in a matter of minutes instead of years, and works on improbability drive, after it was unveiled by him.
The ship saves Arthur and Ford just 2 seconds before their potential death. They meet Zaphod who is a cousin of Ford and once crashed a party on earth where he steals a girl with whom Arthur had a chance with, Trillion – the girl, a doctor in mathematics who Zaphod steals from Earth, the annoyingly cheerful computer and a depressed robot Marvin.
Zaphod explains why he stole the ship – which was to find a legendary and mysterious planet Magrathea which is believed to have been dead for 5 million years now and once used to cater to the demands of the ultra-rich in the galaxy and used to build entire planets for the right amount of money. They land and soon find out that the earth was in fact designed by them at the behest of mice which actually have been fooling humans for a long time and which projected as mice on earth’s dimension but were actually looked quite like humans on their planet. Also, Earth has actually been a computer designed on their request by Magrathea to find out the ultimate question to the answer forty-two (The question they initially wanted the answer of was the meaning of life).
They soon escape the world after the Mice asks Arthur handy over his brain (“for an acceptable replacement, of course”) as his brain was 'an organic a part of the penultimate configuration of the pc program' and heads over to the Restaurant at the tip of the Universe, which makes the following book of the 5 book series.
BOOK REVIEW OF THE HITCHHIKER'S GUIDE TO GALAXY
The Hitchhiker’s Guide to Galaxy has always enjoyed a cult classic status and has been admired by everyone who has ever read them which includes even well-known people such as Neil Gaiman, Richard Dawkins, Stephen Fry to name a few. In my opinion, this simple review is highly unlikely (or improbable) to do this extraordinary book justice and so I think the below snapshot of the Foreword by Russell T Davies, the writer and producer of Doctor Who and Torchwood pretty much sums it up:
Read it on Literary Expeditions!
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