Anybody read Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around Douglas Adams' "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy" series, focusing on its humor, parodies, and related works by the author. Participants share their experiences with the series, including references to its adaptations and other books by Adams.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • One participant highlights the humor and puns in the book, noting parodies of Asimov's Foundation trilogy, such as the concept of a trilogy with five books.
  • Another participant poses a question about revealing the answer to "life, the universe, and everything," which leads to a humorous exchange about the answer being 42.
  • A participant reminisces about the original radio series and suggests avoiding the TV adaptation, while also recommending "Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency" as another humorous work by Adams.
  • One post introduces a humorous scenario involving a Turing test and the answer 42, illustrating the absurdity of common sense in a comedic context.
  • A participant mentions having read the entire series multiple times and expresses interest in other works by Adams, including "Salmon of Doubt" and "Last Chance to See."

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants generally express positive sentiments about the series and its humor, but there is no consensus on the adaptations or the best way to experience Adams' works, as opinions vary on the radio series and TV show.

Contextual Notes

Some participants reference adaptations and other works by Douglas Adams, indicating a broader context of his literary contributions, but specific details about these adaptations remain subjective and unresolved.

Who May Find This Useful

Readers interested in humorous science fiction, Douglas Adams' works, or discussions about literary parodies and adaptations may find this thread engaging.

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Has anybody here read Douglas Adams' The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy ?
I just started the series and am only about 56 pages into it. The whole book is hilarious so far. It's so full of puns, humor, and whim. Has anyone else noticed some subtle parodies to Asimov's Foundation trilogy? Like how they call the series a trilogy when it has five books. Or the parody with the Encyclopedia Galactica, and it's humorous equivilent, the Hitchhiker's Guide?

Post your comments and replies.
 
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Would it spoil the book for you if I posted the answer to "life, the universe, and everything"?
 
too late

Too late Integral. A friend who has read the book already told me it's 42. Now that really gave me laugh.:wink:
 
The whole series is amazing.

You can download the radio series of the first book-and-a-bit, which is also great, but give the TV show a miss...

Jonathan
 
A fantastic read. It first appeared on the Radio when I was about 16/17 and I loved it. SO original. I had tapes of the series somewhere but lost them... Where can you download them from Jono?

When you've done with Hitchhikers, give 'Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency, a go. (Also by D, Adams) It is a very funny book with some very strange concepts in it. In fact, I've just took it off the shelf and am going to read it again now. Bye!
 
42 Turings?

Scientists finally build a super-smart, self-aware computer and proudly challenge the world to a Turing test.

There are two screens, behind one is the computer, a human the other. A room full of people gets to ask each 'blank screen' a question; they judge which one is the computer and which the human. The computer fails the Turing Test if the room full of people can unerringly guess which screen is the computer.

First question, from a schoolkid: "If '42' is the answer, what was the question?"

Computer: "What's 6 times 7?"

Human: "You've got to be kidding! You can't possibly expect a really smart computer to be tripped up with something as transparent as that!"

Scientists conclude that common sense isn't.
 
Last edited:
Anyone not read it? :wink: I've read the whole series more than once. Plus one of the Dirk Gently books. I'm currently listening to "Salmon of Doubt" (book on tape)...which is excellent, and his topic therein entitled "Is there an artificial God?" is amazing. One of these days, I need to find his book "Last Chance to See".

And of course, I tend to quote him in my sig lines.
 

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