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 Life, The Universe, And Everything

Arthur Dent and Ford Prefect are rescued from years of mind-numbing isolation on
prehistoric Earth by a freak time warp and a hovering, but nonetheless elegant,
sofa. They wind up on Earth, at Lord's Cricket Ground, a mere two days before
the planet will be annihilated by the Vogons, but here they witness an alien
incursion of another kind: killer robots from Krikkit descend upon the field to
retrieve one piece of a key that could unlock their ability to destroy the
entire known universe. Slartibartfast appears in his own unlikely spacecraft,
the Bistromath, to whisk Ford and Arthur away on a desperate mission to stop the
Krikkit robots from wiping out everything. It is a mission in which they will
utterly fail.

For many years, I was convinced that - aside from Mostly Harmless - Life, The Universe, And
Everything was my least favorite. I reread it recently during a bit of a Douglas Adams binge, and quickly
discovered that - aside from So Long And Thanks For
All The Fish - it's actually my second favorite.
In the years since its publication, Adams has actually revealed a great deal
about the origins of Life, The Universe, And Everything: the BBC wanted
to make a third radio series out of the book
but Adams couldn't reconcile the end of the mild cliffhanger ending of the
show's second season with the
beginning of this book, and the basic story outline actually came from an
aborted Doctor Who script treatment Adams submitted
under the title of Doctor Who and the Krikkitmen, which Adams found
difficult to adapt to a Hitchhiker's Guide structure because the Doctor would
take action whereas Ford and Zaphod would be more inclined to go to a party
(which is exactly what they do in this book). The bulk of the proactive story
motion winds up coming from Slartibartfast (early on, which turns out to be a
not-so-great fit for that character), Trillian (which finally gives the books'
most under-utilized character something to do, and something major) and
Arthur.
Still, minor gripes aside, I found myself really digging Life's story
structure. It builds up well, and by the time Zaphod makes his first appearance
in the story, not only have we begun to miss the guy, but he adds to both the
comedy and the drama. It think what pleasantly surprises me so much about
Life is how well the drama fits into the mix alongside the comedy.
Adams has hinted that had there been another season of the TV show, or a third
radio series, this is what it would have been like. Fine by me! It has an
interesting feel from putting plotting first and letting the humor come
naturally from the characters. If this is what Hitchhiker's would've been like
on radio or TV in later seasons, we might still be getting the show now, or at
least we might have continued to see it for several years. (There's no telling
with the BBC.)
Another favorite bit in Life is the showdown with Agrajag, a scene
which is still riotously funny and terrifying at the same time, but something
which was also tainted by its use to get out of Mostly Harmless in a big
hurry. It's hard to look at it in retrospect and get quite the same effect
without cringing at how it resolved a couple of books later, but at the time, by
itself, the Agrajag scene was a hoot.
Highly recommended stuff - this and So Long were as good as
Hitchhiker's got.
Reviewed by Earl Green
theLogBook.com webmaster



- Year: 1982
- Author: Douglas Adams
- Genre: science fiction
- Length: 227 pages
- Publisher: Pocket Books
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