The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy
(Douglas Adams)
The Hitchhiker?s Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams is a satirical piece of sci-fi literature, most likely aimed at showing the reader that other sci-fi novels and TV shows use things that are unfathomable in order to entertain the reader. Adams conveys sci-fi ideas that are absolutely insane in his novel, all while somehow making the reader swallow it, letting it slide as possible. At the same time, this satirical novel has some moments that make the reader want to laugh out loud, causing them to forget about all the unbelievable things happening. In short, Adams has created a brilliantly insane world where anything that?s definitely impossible is possible. Let?s start with the Guide itself. The Hitchhiker?s Guide to the Galaxy itself is a book within the book. It?s also the standard repository of all knowledge and wisdom in the universe. This could easily be compared to all those fancy databases found in the computers in star Trek, and since the interface is graphical, it can be compared to the Holocrons within Star Wars as well. The only difference between these things and the Guide really is that the Guide contains a slew of inaccurate, ridiculous, and sometimes useless information. The entry in the Guide for the Earth is just ?Mostly Harmless.? What kind of description of that? It tells the reader just about nothing about the Earth?hell, it doesn?t even tell the reader that it?s a planet! Care to elaborate, Ford Prefect? The weaponry is similar to other sci-fi works as well. Star Wars had their blasters, and Star Trek had their phasers. Stargate: SG-1 had those laser guns that shot once to stun, twice to kill, and thrice to vaporize. All of the weapons killed the victim by zapping them dead. So, what better name to give the blasters in Hitchhiker?s Guide than the Kill-O-Zap gun! So, what?s it do? What do you think? It kills your victim by zapping them dead. Yes, it hurts. It seems to be used by the law enforcement officers of the universe as the standard weapon, as two cops were firing on Arthur Dent?s (the main character) party when they were checking out the planet Magrathea. Alien races? Check! The Hitchhiker?s Guide to the Galaxy has your standard sci-fi races, but they are much different than those you would find in Stargate: SG-1, Star Trek or Star Wars. All of those had serious races that many tolerated as equal and got along very well with, and were humanoid for the most part. The races in Hitchhiker?s Guide are tolerated as equal and are humanoid for the most part but they aren?t really serious?unless you count the Vogons as being seriously bureaucratic. They are a large, green-skinned race that have horrible hygiene and are nothing more than a bunch of bureaucrats. They can?t do much of anything without filling out the proper paperwork to do so, then waiting 4-6 months, hoping that the paperwork is actually found and sent back. They are also the worst poetry writers in the universe?their works can actually kill the person who wrote them! Zaphod Beeblebrox is an unknown species of humanoid, but he?s got two heads and three arms. Why? No one?s sure. But he does not prove in any sense that two heads are better than one, for he?s a complete idiot. The Hitchhiker?s Guide to the Galaxy is trying to tell the reader that sci-fi books use overdone clichés all the time, so Douglas Adams had to do it in a satirical sense. He pulled it off well. I could be mistaken however; he could be trying to say that the Universe is a fun place. If that?s the case, then you?ll need this fish in your ear.
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