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Created: 17th April 2000 |  |
Plaguesville salutes Douglas Adams |
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Not content with inspiring all that you currently survey, and foretelling the advent of the WAP 'phone and their combination in the "big picture" Mr. Adams' genius continues to be proved accurate in remarkable detail. (Despite his denial at U42)
For reasons upon which I will not dwell, I have recently re-read my entire library. It consists of six books, five of which are, really, surplus to requirements because the sixth is "The Meaning of Liff" © Douglas Adams and John Lloyd 1983. I have been struck by the continual instances of art imitating art. In my © Douglas Adams 1992 edition of "Mostly Harmless: the fifth book in the increasingly inaccurately named Hitch Hiker's Guide to the Galaxy trilogy", Chapter 6 contains the following prophetic commentary:
« "Good to see you, little fella," said Ford. The robot rapidly reported back to its central control that everything was now for the best in this best of all possible worlds, the alarms rapidly quelled themselves, and life returned to normal. At least, almost to normal. There was something odd about the place. The little robot was gurgling with electric delight. Ford hurried on down the corridor, letting the thing bob along in his wake telling him how delicious everything was, and how happy it was to be able to tell him that. Ford, however, was not happy. He passed faces of people he didn't know. They didn't look like his sort of people. They were too well groomed. Their eyes were too dead. Every time he thought he saw someone he recognised in the distance, and hurried along to say hello, it would turn out to be someone else, with an altogether neater hairstyle and a much more thrusting, purposeful look than, well, than any body Ford knew. A staircase had been moved a few inches to the left. A ceiling had been lowered slightly. A lobby had been remodelled. All these things were not worrying in themselves, though they were a little disorienting. The thing that was worrying was the decor. It used to be brash and glitzy. Expensive - because the Guide sold so well through the civilised and post-civilised Galaxy - but expensive and fun. Wild games machines lined the corridors. Insanely painted grand pianos hung from ceilings, vicious sea creatures from the planet Viv reared up out of pools in tree-filled atria, robot butlers in stupid shirts roamed the corridors seeking whose hands they might press frothing drinks into. People used to have pet vastdragons on leads and pterospondes on perches in their offices. People knew how to have a good time, and if they didn't there were courses they could sign up for which would put that right. There was none of that now. Somebody had been through the place doing some iniquitous kind of taste job on it." »
Now, I may be biased but I am pleased that young Douglas has done so well. I have enjoyed all of his work since I heard the first radio episode of the Guide. I will, however, accept that other possibilities exist in other improbabilities. So, decide for yourself. Douglas Adams, author of the above, is: a genius, and recognised as such by far too few people, or a witch, and should be burned at the stake, or a time traveller who has conned us all, made monkeys out of Ford and Zaphod, and oodles of bunce out of the rest of the gullible simians.
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plaguesville Last posted: May 10, 2009
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117050
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