cross-posted from: https://kbin.social/m/13thFloor/t/476755
Don’t panic, and bring a towel.
For seasoned galactic travelers, if you’re looking for the Ultimate Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, which includes:
- Hitchhiker’s Guide
- The Restaurant at the End of the Universe
- Life, the Universe, and Everything
- So Long and Thanks for All the Fish
- Young Zaphod Plays It Safe
- Mostly Harmless
… this wormhole should get you there.
Also, upon conferring with both Space and Ice Pirates, I’ve been persuaded to also provide their contribution here in honor of the late, great Douglas Adams.
Now could you guys please untie my cats and get them off the plank?
I’ve never understood the love for these books. I tried my damnedest to read them, but quit halfway through the third book once I irretrievably lost what little ever existed of the plot and hadn’t cracked a smile in over a hundred pages.
The plot isn’t really the point.
Apparently one of the reasons for the historic rivalry between France and England was their different senses of humor, with the French wit considered much classier. Anyway, plenty of people would agree with you, though I think the books are hilarious.
I really like them because they feel like how the inside of my brain looks. It may be that you don’t jive with how Adam’s writes? He did Dirk Gentlys Holistic Detective Agency if you want to try another series but if it’s not for you no worries.
Plenty of books out there.
Tbh, I think the first two books are the best and it finishes perfectly for me there. It feels like that’s where he was on a roll creatively and his heart was really still into it. That might not actually be true, but that’s how it feels.
Douglas Adams himself didn’t like the third book although I still like bits of it. The fourth and fifth I don’t enjoy much - they’re not bad books, just not very funny.
I didn’t laugh at all reading them, and I did occasionally lose track of the plot, but I absolutely enjoyed the books for their creativity and writing. I found it flowed well, and it was like looking into how the author thinks and feels. As with all art though, the experience is very subjective.
It’s basically an internet meme before internet memes existed (that’s not meant to be derogatory)
It’s just fun, quirky, and irrelevant camp.