Is there "Life" on earth?This apparently absurd questions assumes its most urgent and madcap expression, but is not examined by Douglas Adams, in
So Long and Thanks for All the Fish, the fourth (if you believe that you'll believe anything) book in
The Hitchhiker's Trilogy.
Something very weird happens (so what else is new?) to Arthur Dent, Ford Prefect, and all the new voidoid gang when they return to Earth after eight years of crazed wanderings around the galaxy. Foolishly, young Arthur is glad to be back. (What a nerd!)
Still wearing his bathrobe and carrying his tructy towel, Arthur sets out once again (this time he takes no chances and travels by commercial airline) on a wacked-out quest for the right result... and the answers to these embarrasing questions:
What really happened the day the Earth was demoloshed?
Why did all the dolphins disappear?
What is God's Final Message to His creation?
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy is, as has been remarked before, often and accurately, a pretty startling kind of thing. Here and now in the best adventure yet, we mistakenly meet:
- Rob McKenna, an unknown Rain God who has categorized 231 types of precipitation, none of which he likes
- Wonko the Sane (aka John Watson), a mysterious Californian living in a house on the boffo coast called "The Outside of the Asylum."
- Fenchurch, the lovely and slightly-off-the-floor lady who wins Arthur's heart and turns out to be the girl of his dreams.
- A few odd animals including the Babel fish and the stupidest dog in the Universe, Know Nothing Bozo.
Don't Panic. Douglas Adams has done it again! So put on your Final Message rainhats and live happily ever after.
DOUGLAS ADAMS was born in Cambridge, England, in 1952. He has written for radio, television and theater and has worked at various times as a hospital porter, barn builder, chicken-shed cleaner, bodyguard, radio producer and script editor of
Doctor Who. He is the best-selling author of
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy,
The Resaurant at the End of the Universe, and
Life, The Universe and Everything.
Jacket painting copyright © 1984 by Peter Cross
Author photo by Jerry Bauar