Read Don't Panic: Douglas Adams & The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy By Neil Gaiman
Read Don't Panic: Douglas Adams & The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy By Neil Gaiman
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Ebook About The #1 New York Times–bestselling author’s “hilarious . . . idiosyncratic . . . delightful” and definitive companion to a global phenomenon (Publishers Weekly). Douglas Adams’s “six-part trilogy,” The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy grew from a blip of a notion into an ever-expanding multimedia universe that amassed an unprecedented cult of followers and became an international sensation. As a young journalist, Neil Gaiman was given complete access to Adams’s life, times, gossip, unpublished outtakes, and files (and became privy to his writing process, insecurities, disillusionments, challenges, and triumphs). The resulting volume illuminates the unique, funny, dramatic, and improbable chronicle of an idea, an incredibly tall man, and a mind-boggling success story. In Don’t Panic, Gaiman celebrates everything Hitchhiker: the original radio play, the books, comics, video and computer games, films, television series, record albums, stage musicals, one-man shows, the Great One himself, and towels. And as Douglas Adams himself attested: “It’s all absolutely devastatingly true—except the bits that are lies.” Updated several times in the thirty years since its original publication, Don’t Panic is available for the first time in digital form. Part biography, part tell-all parody, part pop-culture history, part guide to a guide, Don’t Panic “deserves as much cult success as the Hitchhiker’s books themselves” (Time Out).Book Don't Panic: Douglas Adams & The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy Review :
It's not anyone's fault that I didn't enjoy this book any more than I did; it's actually to the credit of Mr. Gaiman and everyone else involved that I enjoyed it even this much. You see, I don't like non-fiction and, as a general rule, don't read it. For me, non-fiction gets way too bogged down in facts and too quickly forgets what makes anything worth reading in the first place; ie: a narrative thread to hang onto and someone relatable to root for. Biographies, of which "Don't Panic" is sort of one, gives you the second part, the "someone to root for," but too often gets lost on the path to it's narrative thread by having to stick to the chronological facts exactly as they happened. I gave "Don't Panic" a try, however, because A) it's written about The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy," one of my favorite books and book series and B) it's written by Neil Gaiman, a certified genius and one of my favorite writers. If Gaiman couldn't find a way to make the story of one of my all-time favorite stories interesting, then such a thing just wasn't possible.Apparently, it's not possible. Mr. Gaiman does his absolute best here, letting his own sense of humor run free against the landscape Douglas Adams created and he drops in all sorts of deleted bits of Hitchhiker's dialogue amidst the quotes from friends and collegues, but it seems here that Gaiman is so dedicated to giving Adams' story (and the stories he wrote) it's due, that he forgets, or perhaps doesn't feel he has permission to, delete the parts that are just too dry (read: boring) to keep the narrative interesting. Because make no mistake, this book includes EVERYTHING that has ever happened in the world of making The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy one of the best and funniest radio shows/books/video games/movies, etcetera and soforth and so on in the history of the known universe, and while you will learn much about the vagaries of Adams' world-famous procrastination and the corporate ins and outs of the BBC and Hollywood, you will also find yourself nodding off in points, or if not nodding off, certainly wishing the current chapter would come to an end and that the next chapter would be about something completely different. Mr. Gaiman has a deep love and appreciation of Douglas Adams and his work and if you share that love to the same extent, you will find much to enjoy in this book. However, as someone who was mainly interested in the rocky road of the Hitchhiker's Guide with a bit of Dr. Who and Dirk Gently tossed in for good measure, there's an awful lot about conservation specials and climbing Mount Kilamanjaro in a Rhinocerous suit that was set way beyond my interest level. Don't get me wrong, Mr. Gaiman has probably written as good and entertaining a book about Douglas Adams as you could possibly want or expect, but the chapters devoted to projects outside the ones the title led me to expect grind the whole thing down to a screeching halt. This is a book for the truly serious Douglas Adams afficianado; the merely curious should find their entertainment (and their towels) elsewhere. I read the Hitchhiker and all its sequels many years ago. As a result, the details are long gone from my memory. Gaiman writes to the reader who has memorizes and retained every possible detail involved. So, I was bored or lost much of the time. I did enjoy reading about Douglas Adams. Read Online Don't Panic: Douglas Adams & The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy Download Don't Panic: Douglas Adams & The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy Don't Panic: Douglas Adams & The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy PDF Don't Panic: Douglas Adams & The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy Mobi Free Reading Don't Panic: Douglas Adams & The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy Download Free Pdf Don't Panic: Douglas Adams & The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy PDF Online Don't Panic: Douglas Adams & The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy Mobi Online Don't Panic: Douglas Adams & The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy Reading Online Don't Panic: Douglas Adams & The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy Read Online Neil Gaiman Download Neil Gaiman Neil Gaiman PDF Neil Gaiman Mobi Free Reading Neil Gaiman Download Free Pdf Neil Gaiman PDF Online Neil Gaiman Mobi Online Neil Gaiman Reading Online Neil GaimanRead Online Tiamat's Wrath (The Expanse Book 8) By James S. A. Corey
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