Old Man Mike
Fast as Lightning!
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The Hitchhikers Guide To The Galaxy is a "British" product of the imagination, which colors it in a certain way. It is intelligently written and creative, and many times borders on the slapstick ridiculous [therefore you have to be in that sort of mood to enjoy it.] Douglas Adams is a thinker, however, and broaches both scientific and existential conundrums in his seemingly light-hearted way --- a non-spoiler example: "Time is an Illusion; lunchtime doubly so." [there's a lot more in that than meets the ear.]
The British underpinning of this is: it's materialist and fatalistic. There is no shred of spirituality anywhere and therefore, in typical modern Brit fashion, no purpose to anything except getting on with the next day and trying to survive. Adams in the end is one of those moderns who is tremendously creative and intelligent but ultimately hopeless --- life is only trying to survive and have as good a time doing it as you can. His other popular book [Dirk Gently's ... something or another... Detective Agency ] has at least a small wedge in it allowing the reader to imagine other realities and possible wider hopes. Both are extremely clever.
The British underpinning of this is: it's materialist and fatalistic. There is no shred of spirituality anywhere and therefore, in typical modern Brit fashion, no purpose to anything except getting on with the next day and trying to survive. Adams in the end is one of those moderns who is tremendously creative and intelligent but ultimately hopeless --- life is only trying to survive and have as good a time doing it as you can. His other popular book [Dirk Gently's ... something or another... Detective Agency ] has at least a small wedge in it allowing the reader to imagine other realities and possible wider hopes. Both are extremely clever.